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File: boykisser.png (228 KB, 635x719)
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>use opus 4.5 to write a tedious but conceptually easy function
>it generates slop
>I tell it how to fix the slop
>better but still slop
>repeat this process like 7 times
>Error: You've hit your usage limit

I'm considering moving to a dumber model that is faster and cheaper. I can't trust even the best LLMs to write good code yet so I think I will lean in more into treating them like a fancy pattern matcher/autocomplete and find one that is good for that. Maybe only use opus 4.5 for code review.
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>>107896624
>post off topic, vile shit
>incite other posters to do the same
such are the lgbtgroids.
>>
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>>107896632
Sorry for posting off topic insult/polbait guys, temporary relapse. I'll post gayer stuff now though ;D
>>
>>>/g/ >>>/a/ >>>/y/
>>
>>107896651
no biggie
retards are part of 4chans ecosystem
theyre something along the lines of designated victims
>>
>>107896585
>/v/ promoting furry porn while anon is against it
What? WHAT?

Recommend me a Instagram extractor/scraper that works similar to wget without login on Linux CLI
>>
>>107894630
>>107889889
Saving images of women you will never be able to touch is cringe, anon.
>>
When I was a retard I couldn't quite let go of a girl that ignored me after the first date. I used one of these online "anonymous" scrapers that are everywhere to check out her stories and feel fomo. I never saved her pics or whatever but for some reason I couldn't quite let go of her.
I had no idea she could see that some bot shows up as a viewer on her stories lol, at some point it seems she figured out it was probably me and blocked me all of a sudden without saying a word.
Now I physically cringe anytime I think about it. Don't be like me anon. Whatever your use case is it's probably not good for you.
>>
>>107894630
>without login
none of them. ig requires login for highest res. make a dummy account and use gallery-dl.
>>
>>107894630
gallery-dl --verbose --cookies-from-browser "Firefox::all" --sleep-request 20-30 -o include=posts,highlights,tagged $url -r 500K

Works for public accounts. You'll have to login for private ones, anon

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>upgrade a single component in PC
>everything runs objectively worse on every metric
Why do I even try. I hate modern technology.
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>>107896863
>went from 16 GB to 32 GB this week
>booting time, FPS on games, tons of shit suddenly silky smooth
wtf
>>
>>107897005
You ever get itchy balls and starch scratchjng them then you can't stop scratching. So you end up scratching your balls nonstop to the point their raw but you can't help but scratching?
Yeah, thats what buying a console is like
>>
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>>107896863
>"Upgrade" components in dinoPC
>Every "upgrade" is a 3-5 year old part
>"PCI-e 3.0"...that's okay I'm wise enough to know anything I can afford won't eat the bandwidth, "4,0, 5.0" mean nothing to me.
>USB 3.2...oh I see they still haven't made a better naming convention, good thing my case only has usb 2.0 ports on the front as to not to confuse me.
>Oh damn we're up to nvme gen 5? My gen 3 dramless crucial couldn't care less.
>Keep doing this until virtually every part of my PC is hardened by silicon lottery
>Not "good", but never dies. Is that good?

It's good when literally anything is an upgrade. I'm having a field day with the $150 3060 I bought a week before Nvidia announced they plan to remake it. They apparently agree with my logic (of there being nothing worth a piss to upgrade to past that point)
>>
my haswell system that i first built it with windows 8.1 in 2015 is faster than my ryzen 9 system with windows 11. This cannot be me by the way.
>>
>>107897056
Did you just stick it in there and it worked? I have some extra RAM for my server that I haven't put in yet. It runs Debian. Do I just throw the RAM in there and power it on as normal?

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Post build list or current specs: https://pcpartpicker.com/
Provide specific use cases
State BUDGET and COUNTRY or you will NOT be helped

>CASE
mATX: AP201, Lian Li A3, XT M3, CH260
ATX: XT PRO (ULTRA), AIR 903 Base/MAX, Lancool 207, Flux Pro, Meshify 3, 4000D FRAME, X50
Dual Chamber: Y60/70, O11 Vision, Antec C8

>CPU
Gaming: 14700K (DDR4), 9/7600X, 7/9800X3D
-Budget: 7500F
Workstation: 265K, 9950X3D

*Avoid Asrock motherboards on AM5

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my acer monitor is giving me nausea and headaches. if i look at the monitor really close i can see thin transparent vertical lines moving quickly to the left. i tried different hdmi cables, different power cables and they're still there. swapped to my laptop's hdmi port and nothing changed. im never buying a monitor from these retards ever again
>>
>>107897717
pro tip: buy an LG monitor
>>
>>107897721
advice taken. do you have any opinions on hp/dell or whatever? or like just brands to avoid ig
>>
>>107897778
*for monitors
>>
>>107897778
u dont want a hp or dell they're old brands but they're mostly crap now. LG IPS will change your life

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Let's see your setups /g/!
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>>107890722
Why are you doing a naked dogeza with your apple shit
>>
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>>107893911
>>
>>107896802
I don't get it. What are the arrows for, anon?
>>
>>107897108
Isn't that just a Raging Storm motion?
>>
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>>107886166
hi there

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>talking to chatbot about my problem
>every solution requires spending money
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>>
>>107895202
you're doomed
>>
>>107894511
Spend money on a GPU so you can talk to local LLMs.
>>
>>107894511
You aren't paying for that chatbot. The companies that benefit from what it's suggesting to you do.
>>
>>107894870
I need...15...hundred trillion dollars.
>>
>>107894511
>every solution requires spending money
Slopman already rolled out chADgpt??

What are you working on, /g/?

Previous thread: >>107840984
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>>107896614
As the other anon said sorting.
It's "string compare" not "string equals", so it's <, ==, and > at the same time. <0, ==0, >0 are used to represent those results.
C isn't the only language that does that for comparisons.
>>
>>107896170
Nah, json is kind of shit as a human-writable configuration format.
The lack of comments and trailing commas is ass.
>>
>>107895946
This is interesting, I was thinking tab delimited or equal, or some combination of. I've seen patterns like this in small simple user facing files before. Where complex structure encoding isn't really necessary.
>>
There has not been a web dev general for a long time. I am just curious if anyone knows where the fuck all those people went who used to go there.
>>
>>107896690
lol holy shit. the funny thing is I see problems like this and think no fucking company will actually ask this shit. but I actually had to live code the sudoku solver and the toposort class schedule one in interviews like sharing my screen and stuff. In both cases I solved it and didn't get the job. How is getting a job so hard? This world is bananas. At least I've gotten to a point where leet code is a fun puzzle now.... mostly.

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>marmaduke ungoogled-chromium win builds have been outdated for two months now
what now winsaars?
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>>
>>107895146
So you don't want google's spyware, bu tyou are ok with microsoft's spyware?
What's even the point?
>>
>>107896399
1. I turned it off
2. It actually works, unlike troonux
>>
>>107895146
>last build December
>it's January
>outdated by two months
Hmmmm
le almonds jingling
>>
>>107897464
It's a dead project and only gets more dead by the day.
>>
>>107897368
>It actually works, unlike troonux
Yeah, troons don't work they just update their shit
https://salsa.debian.org/chromium-team/chromium
updated yesterday it seems..

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Is small electronic repair a dead end field?
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>>107894404
Not yet, but chips are moving to proprietary versions and/or serialization. It'll get to a point you can't repair anything, that's the peak greed we're heading for.
>>
It will only become a more niche field
Nothing is being designed with repairability in mind unless its open source
>>
Rossman has talked about it, he basically says you may get by if you already have a shop, experience and a customer base. Otherwise it will not only drive you insane but make very few profits. Part of it is it is a saturated field, the other part is manufacturers have made things exceedingly hard for beginners or those who cannot afford expensive tools. The real money is in $current_year device repairs, things people canNOT afford to throw out, or replace due to the way encryption-storage-hardware are tied today. Those are the people that pay good money. If you cannot reach them you'll be stuck with poor AND dumb cunts expecting you to rebuild or diagnose some ultra obscure failure in their obscure and replacement-scarce device, all for $15 + shipping + no tip.

If you've seen the kind of equipment the pros use, and the cost of it, and you can afford giving it a try by all means go for it.
>>
>>107894766
and you only need $800,000 of machinery
so easy anyone could solder vram
>>
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>>107897476
>he thinks hot air station costs $800,000

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Recently, senior executives at Salesforce have admitted, both internally and publicly, that they massively overestimated AI’s capabilities. They have found that AI simply can’t cope with the complex nature of customer service and totally fails at nuanced issues, escalations, and long-tail customer problems. They even say that it has caused a marked decline in service quality and far more complaints.

But the problems go far deeper than that.

Both employees and executives have said that the company is wasting countless resources on firefighting to stabilise operations since the mass AI layoff. Employees have to spend so much time stepping in to correct the wildly wrong AI-generated responses that AI is wasting more time than it saves. In other words, this AI reduces productivity, not increases it.

But there is also a huge problem here with expertise and skill debt. On top of the firefighting to correct the AI, executives have also highlighted how they are also having to firefight to stabilise their systems from problems that were previously easily solved by staff who had the required experience and skill. However, these staff were fired in the AI layoffs.

Expertise, experience and skilled employees are really hard for a company to acquire. You see, much of the expertise, experience, and skills required are unique to the company and its operations. These operations will have quirks, common problems, and unique issues that even the most experienced outsider will really struggle with, but are effortless to someone with experience within the company. As such, these attributes are not only vital, but are nurtured and grown within a company, and cannot be hired in on a whim. What Salesforce has done is chuck all this experience out the window, and now they are suffering.
>https://www.planetearthandbeyond.co/p/reality-is-breaking-the-ai-revolution

thoughts?
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>>107889127
Their problems stem from the their lack of awareness of internal operations. The executives had a distorted sense of reality and got swayed by unscrupulous sycophants and AI sales people.
>>
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>>107896040
i honestly cannot think of anything more embarrassing than being a cogsucker at this point
>>
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>>107893556
>>
>>107897280
Yeah it's also easy to find cases where what it says is either completely retarded or just wrong.
>>
>>107896040
>we are at the very least 1-2 years away from AI being good enough to replace engineers
If you were employed and knew your job was likely going away and getting replaced with nothing in 1-2 years, you'd be doomposting too.

what do you guys think will be the next big programming language? like is rust going to replace c++? is something new going to come along?
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>>
>>107897386
Every single word
>>
>>107897390
I accept your concession.
>>
>>107897417
>coping again
>>
>>107892986
>Noooo bro AI hasn't improved since the last time I used it 3 years ago once
2 minutes, always 0 syntax errors now. Cope harder.
>>
>>107895908
NTA but I also see slopware engineering replacing manual coding. In the future you won't have any APIs that intake files, XML or JSON, it will be all one single AI interface. AI will be able to intake any kind of information and translate it for its needs for downstream systems. No need to create any glue code which is what majority of devs spend their time on today.

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previous: >>107878988

#define __NR_rt_sigprocmask        14

https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/sigprocmask.2.html

today's thread is again mostly a continuation of the previous thread's discussion. we will focus on linux signals in general. from the manpage, these two excerpts are what i feel is the most interesting:
>It is not possible to block SIGKILL or SIGSTOP. Attempts to do so are silently ignored.
this one makes sense if you understand the reasoning behind it, but i have seen many questions on this in the past. definitely a topic worth discussing
>Each of the threads in a process has its own signal mask.
this is useful because it is powerful, but it is also really annoying in its complexity, lol
i guess honorable mention to the note about undefined behavior, as well

relevant resources:
man man

man syscalls


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>>
i guess this is another boring syscall
>>
You can’t get a segfault if you ignore sigsegv!
>>
Please keep making these threads. They're great, and so are you.

Nothing of value to add to the discussion, but just know I'm lurkin and gettin learnt
>>
>>107895626
really makes u think
>>107896235
thank you! i will do my best to keep it up ^^
>>
>>107889612
I really like the fact that you have two signals for termination, where one suggests and the other enforces. I think it's good api design to have an entity with authority/control over another to be able to choose to tell it to stop itself, or to stop the thing itself.
I don't like the fact that you have dozens of different signals all doing basically the same thing making it nigh impossible to handle comprehensively, but whatever.

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How the fuck is a 1998 game capable of generating collisions for any terrain and it just works on super old hardware?
Meanwhile Godot's trimesh is so slow it cannot even run smoothly on modern hardware (and also broken since version 4), while anything other than trimesh will cause the player to literally fall through the stage?

Can someone explain this?
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>>107889363
Go look at kaze's stuff on youtube, the guy who basically rewrote mario 64 for his romhack. He also redid the collision and he says it's unbreakable now. Anyway he could answer your question exactly but I'm not kaze so this is the best I can do
>>
>>107889603
It's impressive in a lot of ways, but not graphically.
>>
>>107896770
True but modern games still use hitboxes or spheres so the collisions are not actually high poly.
>>
>>107890073
What about quake 3?
>>
>>107897397
well, collisions are never high poly, but simlation games come to mind where you might want to have exact collision detection
fps' may want that
but this raises two questions:
where do hitboxes end and low poly meshes begin?
and do we count simulating a bullet in mil sims as collision detection?

and regardless:
you can surf rockets in fortnite
but theyre also a projectile so they cant have a plainly cuboid hitbox

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Why is complaining about the captcha worth a 3-day global? How are captchas not technology?
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>>107897328
no, i have my own non static public IP, not behind cgnat. i think it's just the janny trooning.
that or one of my network devices has one of those 4chan proxies maliciously installed on it. i need to run a pcap on my router while i sleep.
>>
>>107897294
iot was a mistake
>>
>>107897294
It's literally a dice roll whether you see the fake ban page or not:
https://github.com/DeusMaveriX/4chan-source-code/blob/e79cecdf1b84c90742bfe2e0b9a54153a92f8a4d/imgboard.php#L6359
>>
>>107897363
Oops, wrong line of code: https://github.com/DeusMaveriX/4chan-source-code/blob/e79cecdf1b84c90742bfe2e0b9a54153a92f8a4d/imgboard.php#L6377
>>
>>107897194
dont dig the 4chan captcha rabbit hole
the bold member site is responsible for this shit captcha

https://thebarchive.com/b/thread/943792345

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i want to learn low level systems programming

i want to build fast and learn how to manage a real-world application

i want to get better at leetcode

i want to learn system design

i want to learn linux

i want to learn AWS

i want to learn everything about the web

paralyzed by indecision. i want to learn everything.
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>>
ok im confused now im just going to use WSL is that ok im fine with not becoming a linux wizard
>>
>>107893235
Start by building REST API with a java/.NET/node/rails backend and a SQL database. The problem this solves is essentially to 1) store data and 2) let users view/query the data in some way that's useful to them. Think about examples like a system to keep track of which students are enrolled in which classes, what grades they get on assignments, etc. Or a system used to keep of apartment units and who's occupied them and how much they're paying in rent. Or IMDB.

The natural extension that I left out is building a (e.g. React based) web UI on top of your API. Of course this would all be hosted on cloud infrastructure like AWS, and there's several different ways you could build it (will you use kubernetes, plain virtual machines, serverless functions? Etc.)

As a next step for evolving this CRUD app, think about all the data these systems contain, and then think about what functionality you could build on top of that to surface new insights. Like for the apartment building example, you could use all this data to make predictions about the optimal rent to charge based on historical information. Maybe you'll have a batch processing system that runs once a day and processes all the new data, or maybe you just run these calculations only when the user pulls up the pricing prediction page in the app, or maybe you build it in an event based fashion where each new data point (say a new person rents an apartment and so this data gets entered into the system) gets streamed to a kafka cluster and downstream workers do the calculations asynchronously.
>>
>>107892978
ignore the web first, you don't want to have your brain fucked forever by this retardation, start with actual programming
>>
>>107893926
WSL isn’t a 1:1 replacement but honestly for anything ur doing beginner wise it should be fine? that being said some literal tranny at my work is a self proclaimed linux nerd and i hate his fucking guts because he sounds so effeminate so i wouldn’t bother with tranny linux shit
>>
>>107893235
It’s not vague when you actually have a job, even at mcdonalds


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