We don't forget that on Haiku we also have some really nice native applications, one of them being StreamRadio.
An application native to Haiku to search for and listen to internet radio stations.
@xinit There is legitimately a lot of malice out there tho
Hundreds of thousands of Computers won't be able to upgrade to Windows 11, but that shouldn't make them eWaste.
Kudos to the @kde team for this amazing initiative!
@MisuseCase @DJGummikuh @tante
A better example would be the advancements in rocketry.
I see the Nazi obsession with rockets has not gone away after all these years.
@DJGummikuh the question is not whether the research might yield interesting results. As societies we kinda decided that the ends do not justify the means.
@tetrislife @lohang @freemo i think it's fine that instances block others, the problem is if it's done based on made up accusations (like with fosstodon) to generate outrage and pressure others to do alike. often under threat to be blocked as well, guilt by association.
the only way to deal with this is to not play the outrage game. let the blockers create their bubble, don't try to apologize or reason.
@amoroso There's always @mikedev's projects, like Streams and Forte, which put their emphasis on nomadic identity. They are hosted on Codeberg:
https://codeberg.org/fortified/forte
https://codeberg.org/streams/streams
follow-up: looks like @Codeberg removed all the bad accounts and their posts in aggregate, so users like me didn't have to do anything. great! that's actually a better experience than GitHub in some cases.
Everyone you meet is fighting a battle you know nothing about
The battle is against vampires
Their battles against vampires are basically the same as your own battles against vampires
If only it wasn't considered rude to talk about vampires,
Then maybe we'd realize we're all fighting the same goddamn vampires
Super interesting publication: https://web.ist.utl.pt/nuno.lopes/pubs/ub-pldi25.pdf It analyzes how much compilers actually gain from exploiting undefined behavior to optimize C/C++ code, by hacking up LLVM to eliminate UB and thus denying the optimizer those strategies.
They find that the performance degradation is only on the order of single digit percent, and that quite a few of those losses can be recovered with a little bit of compiler work to make non-UB optimization strategies work a little better.
I find this super interesting, because I'd naively assume that forcing the compiler to assume that pointers can alias would be catastrophic, but instead... it's kinda within the range where you could choose to pay for a slightly bigger computer in exchange for a language that doesn't randomly stab you in the face in non-obvious ways.
I wonder: are all the books against AI written by smart people and all books in favour of AI written by AI itself and the problem is that people don’t read, or don’t understand, or are willing to burn the planet for better code completion?
Perhaps I am oversimplifying and you get a bit more out of it. But on the other hand top AI nutsos are saying we might end up needing to spend 99% of the energy generated on AI otherwise the Chines will “win”‽ And AI bro number one said not too long ago that AI was going to require nuclear fusion technology. You know, the other technology that hasn’t been delivering for over fifty years. Except for bombs.
Ah, right. We also use AI for bomb delivery, of course.
@chris_spackman Technically, Emacs is a Lisp machine emulator with a set of demo applications, including a text editor. @rk
pro-libre software, pro-holisticism
pro-communalism, anti-consumerism
fan of #Plan9 and #HaikuOS
anti-witchhunt, see https://stallmansupport.org
I write software (C++) for a living.