@lanodan @coolboymew there's a picture of that somewhere but I can't find it :-/
@lanodan @coolboymew apparently the Event Horizon Telescope (global array of radio-telescopes) uses people flying on planes with suitcases full of HDDs as the main form of data transfer.
> Each telescope records at a rate of 64 Gbps, and each observation period can last more than 10 hours. This means each site generates around half a petabyte of data per run. With each site recording simultaneously, Blackburn said the high recording speed and sheer volume of data captured made it impractical to upload to a cloud.
@coolboymew the funniest part is that occasionally someone does strap whatever the current equivalent of a terabyte SD card is to a homing pigeon and beats an ISP in throughput. I've seen news of one of those cases relatively recently. (This year or the past couple of years.)
@freemo hey, it is the fault of capitalism. Wouldn't have high cost of cars and homes without cars and homes available to the public in the first place.
@ercanbrack only a third? Last time I saw mine it was about 50% ads and "suggested posts" ie ads but for facebook pages.
They simply realised that Facebook users will at this point accept any treatment, no matter how bad, as long as they can still kind of use the service.
@icedquinn @freemo it's not that hexagons fit the space better, it's just that they have a more physically stable structure. Which is pretty useful when the comb hangs its significant weight off its wax structure.
Hey, would you look at that! I wrote another conformant Vulkan implementation...
https://www.collabora.com/news-and-blog/news-and-events/nvk-reaches-vulkan-conformance.html
I'm not sure if it will pan out this way, but it feels like the #steamdeck is one of the most important devices of late for #pcgaming and #linuxgaming when you think about the AAA #gamedevelopment process.
So historically it's easier to develop for #consoles as you have a common spec to develop against so you know if it's going to run well. The deck easily could become the PCs common spec, giving a single lowest denominator that also can be used to verify #linux compatibility as well.
@thomasfuchs until 2013 the ISS was running WinXP on its main UI computer. Yes, with the old NTFS that will be happy to mega corrupt if the power is lost at an inconvenient moment or a stray cosmic ray decides to be extra annoying.
Having horrible unreliable UI that works with the very redundant and reliable hardware and firmware that actually runs the vessel seems to be a trend in the space industry. Electron-based rocket control still takes the cake as the most horrifying example I know of though.
you want an open messaging platform? cool! we have:
* extremely old small protocol with an extension library more confusing than quantum physics, and clients that look like they came from the most horrible depth of early 2010s app development
* new protocol taking inspiration from the previous one, except it's horribly overengineered, which causes implementations that aren't the reference one to basically not exist, and the reference one to constantly break
* a discord clone developed by a bunch of teenagers as a side hobby with next to no planning or really any idea what do they even want from it
* a literal discord clone that has been pushed to indefinite rebranding and restructuring
@BrodieOnLinux tell him about One Pace
@nixCraft Google decided that promoting and improving adblockers wasn't enough and they also need to promote Chrome alternatives.
@nixCraft Google decided that promoting and improving adblockers wasn't enough and they also need to promote Chrome alternatives.
Software developer, open-source enthusiast, wannabe software architect. I like learning and comparing different technologies. Also general STEM nerd.