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"MIPS has picked up two former execs from SiFive in a bid to boost its development efforts"

theregister.com/2024/01/03/mip

I started doing graphics on framebuffer. My favorite era was proto-compute shaders with PS3 CELL SPUs. Few people at the time understood what was happening and where it was going.

Minor arch changes aren’t so interesting to me, and they don’t even matter for that long.

I sometikes wonder if I'm a narcissist. On the other hand, I get input from people around me that justifies a certain belief that I have a bit of talent. And I get out of the way if I bother people. It's probably not possible for a narcissist to conclude that he is a narcissist though.

A famous character in Norwegian fairytales is the Ashlad.

In the fairytale, his brothers think he's useless and make fun of him for being weird and poking at the ashes in the fireplace all day.

He leaves to go on a long journey and uses his wit and generosity to gather friends with magic powers along the way.

He wants to marry the princess, but the king will only let him do so if he can carry out a series of impossible tasks, which his magical friends help him with, and they live happily ever after.

And he's not typically Norwegian at all. We're not bold risk takers who go on big adventures. His bothers are more typical, to be honest.

We used to have these Ashlads called the Vikings once. Many of them found better lives abroad, so they never came back.

I think the population of anywhere on Earth falls into three broad categories:

1. They are happy with life and see no reason to leave.

2. They're not in a position to leave safely, so they make do with what they've got.

3. They're desperate for a new life, so they take great risks to escape their old one.

I'm currently somewhere in between 2 and 3. I haven't been able to make a good life for myself here, and I've seen greener pastures abroad, but I'm also hesitant to do something potentially stupid.

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So I walked into my bathroom to find a candle heater and broken glass.

I thought about the problem and how it could be solved with fire and science. What I came up with is essentially a gasifier turbine with an afterburner.

The broken glass remains on the floor and I'm reminded why Mathematicians are meme machines. No one asked for that solution and I walked barefoot into the bathroom.

If one introduces thermal energy there's a pressure differential that can turn a turbine which would feed cooler oxygen rich air into the system and keep indicating this air. The flame would only be for the main operation while the more volatile hydrocarbons (pretty smells) would be ducted through an hour glass shaped duct from the wax and ignite after the flame.

The broken glass still remains and I think modern candles are fundamentally flawed in their design.

But am I wrong?

The Problem with Norway:

With time, there are quite a few things outside this country's borders that have given me the best experiences in life, such as love, and something that resembles popularity.

I don't seem to have managed anything particularly positive together with people from Norway, to be quite honest. Several examples with people from other countries. One of the first things was perhaps ArtGrounds and Sketcher. An art community and digital painting app. I suddenly had a kind of friend group. And got my first girlfriend, from the USA.

After that, positive social experiences have been rather scarce here in Norway, with the exception of a couple of pals.

I'm generally perceived as a bit difficult, I've come to realise. You have to be simple and straightforward here in Norway, and in many ways, that is not who I am.

My enthusiasm for the climate, the food and the culture is also rather limited. I simply don't see much reason to be satisfied with what I see around me. I have a kind of basic material security, but most other things are lacking.

As I've said before: I feel like an immigrant in my own country. It might have something to do with autism and ADHD.

Norway is my roots but I don't feel that I have room to grow, so I've just become a stump. Not that I have unrealistic expectations that it would be that much better elsewhere. I've heard that life for misfits can be difficult in other places too.

There is probably something about the Internet though. Through the English language and all the nooks and crannies of the Internet you can reach with it, I have found a lot that I feel is important to me. You could say that knowing English has been quite important for my enjoyment of life.

One thing I noticed about the culture in my own home town was how narrow the acceptance of slightly unusual behaviour was. You only had to be a little weird before there were negative reactions. Almost to a degree that if you didn't breathe at the same pace as everyone else, it prompted negative reactions.

In Oslo, acceptance is greater. But no bigger than if I put on a hat and a fun shirt and go out here, I'll be approached sexually by several gay people, because apparently, only gays do this in Norway.

I think it has to do with the size of the place. The smaller the space, the less acceptance of individualism. The Law of Jante therefore does not only apply to small towns. It just expands a little to give more room for misfits if the place is a little bigger. You should preferably grow in a very specific way in small places. There is no room for anything else.

You can imagine a society with 3 people. Everyone has to do farming and fishing to survive. A little more people and you might have room for people who do other things.

I'm not put together to do what my culture expects of me. I'm in a parts drawer, but Norway is an electrician and I'm a transistor. Transistors are great if you are building a radio, but we don't do that here in Norway.

I could well imagine settling in a slightly bigger city than Oslo, but it's difficult when I'm not offered the opportunity to do so. I'd have to take a huge risk and go there empty-handed. I don't have the savings for anything like that.

@freemo It is perhaps NSFW but it reminds me how some scientists treat some of the weird things I toot.

youtube.com/watch?v=sp8aI47ulD

Had a great first day with my new team! Really excited about this gang, they seem like a great gang.

Today is my first day for my new company with our firsy real hires. Im the foubder so a lot kf pressure on mu shoulders.

Wish me luck!

@thor

Sometimes I just want to learn about Lithography... but no. I'm pretty sure she doesn't want to meet me.

Someone should get a mortar so we could have a fun New Year's celebration. Like high explosive mortar rounds.

Nothing is on fire and it feels weird. Anxiety from lack of stimulation is odd. :ablobspin:

She better think twice before starting any running gags as they get old quick.

SAN FRANCISCO — Google has agreed to settle a $5 billion privacy lawsuit alleging that it spied on people who used the “incognito” mode in its Chrome browser - along with similar “private” modes in other browsers - to track their internet use.

I bet they sell it and such for more than what they just “paid”. Especially when FBI et al will pay a good bit for such “legal” spying, even before you get into using the same data for AI and algorithms. So like how many ways can they profit off that data? 🤔

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