thomask

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submitted 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I realise this is supposed to be a dystopia but I can't help but notice that the workers are not being bothered by Outlook or Teams/Slack pings. They get to focus for hours at a time on their mysterious and important work, and what's more, they are unambiguously rewarded for executing that specific task well.

Is anyone else just the tiniest bit jealous? Maybe Jame Eagan read a lot of Cal Newport or something.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 4 days ago (3 children)

Milchick, as manager of the severed floor, failed to maintain appropriate Occupational Health & Safety standards by allowing a firearm and ammunition to be available and removable from the sacrifice chamber without adequate controls.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 4 days ago

Why is this LLM trying to teach me about acyclic graphs in the middle of an article about Linux platform support?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I was thinking about this some more and the severed floor would be an outstanding setting for a modern RP MUD. Character classes could be the different departments and you could develop your character's skills and earn rewards. Maybe there could be some new spins on the genre like hallway paths are randomised per person and you need help to learn to reach other departments, or you have a limited budget for actions that cause restrictions or send you to the break room.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Take your time with reintegration. I want more goat-related world-building.

[–] [email protected] 18 points 1 week ago

AFAICT this is super mundane. Devs added some checks that when run will drop .hdrtest files all over the source tree when you do a normal build. This is really unclean and has practical ramifications even if you gitignore them as Linus points out. Pretty much any lead developer would be upset if someone tried to merge something like this in a software project, and it has essentially nothing to do with the particular drivers or code functionality.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

As a rule I don't directly quote bboard messages elsewhere, even if they're mundane or from the admin. Just a bit of respect to folks who aren't posting on the web and might not want to be.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago (2 children)

There was a reply that it should be okay now but more disks will be needed soon

 

One of the most frequent criticisms about the Gemini network is that there’s no content on it. When I hear that, my answer is always the same :

"That’s the very point".

 

Nearly two years ago, I put into words the dream I had for a durable computer. A computer that would be built for a lifetime. A computer that would not do everything but could do 80% of what I expect from it. I called this idea the Forever Computer.

I expected to launch a conversation about what we really expect from computers. What do we really want from them? What are some limitations that could free us?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago (3 children)

FYI I posted in REQUESTS, so I'm sure it will get looked at sooner or later.

 

How to create the long-lasting computer that will save your attention, your wallet, your creativity, your soul and the planet. Killing monopolies will only be a byproduct.

 

You've probably heard of the famous 'thank you for playing Wing Commander' story. It claims that a programmer on the original Wing Commander was stuck getting an error message when the game unloaded its memory during a quit. Pressed for time, instead of fixing the issue he simply hex edited the memory manager's error reporting to print 'thank you for playing Wing Commander' instead. A funny and relatable story!

...

Wing Commander I fans, meanwhile, have been understandably cautious about the anecdote and particularly the included screenshot. For one thing, Wing Commander I's default install direction isn't c:/wc1 and the game doesn't actually print "Thank You for Playing Wing Commander!" when you quit. Is the story even real?

 

From their intro post:

The fictional situation is the following: there has been some sort of social collapse and the Internet infrastructure is gone: there’s no more Internet for us. Now imagine that in this situation we still find value in our computers; how would we operate them now that we don’t have Internet?

I would like to analyze which Operating Systems would be suitable to for this imaginary scenario. In particular I would like to evaluate the Operating System at the following points:

  • Can I store a software repository with the programs that I or someone in my area may need?
  • Can I store the source code corresponding to the software repository so that I or someone else can fix potential bugs or extends the programs that we may need to use?
  • Can I create new installation images from the OS itself, so that I can install it in other computers?
  • Can I store the OS source code so that I or someone else can fix potential bugs or extend the OS funcionality / support and from it build installation images of the OS? And can I achieve all this offline?

There is also a NetBSD version

 

As a grumpy old man who wishes his computer would stop changing I've been trying to get on board with XFCE for a while and the big blocker has been making things work well on my 4K screen. (For the record this post is based on Debian testing = trixie, X11, and nvidia proprietary drivers god have mercy on my soul.)

For a while XFCE only supported the type of scaling that makes things smaller. Understandably IMO this confused a few people and happily this has been upgraded and now it also makes things bigger. However in my experience this also makes things blurrier.

In my latest round of testing it appears that the situation can be fixed with a single setting: font DPI.

Settings Manager > Appearance > Fonts (tab) > Custom DPI setting > I chose 150, and logged out and in to have everything take effect.

From this single change everything is looking good in both GTK and Qt apps. I did also increase the size of my panel through the panel settings, and title bars are kind of tiny, but mostly I use maximised applications so I'm not stressing about this too much.

Hope this helps anyone else who is stuck in an "ohgod why couldn't we just stop after Windows 2000" love-hate relationship with computers.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

I mean, maybe? But what does the revolution even want? Stable non-creepy jobs and 40 hours a week subtracted from their outies' lives so they can progress their office romance during breaks?

I'm leaning towards some goal that's more specific to Helena's situation. Since her father has taken an interest in her innie behaviour it's likely that she'll get to continue as Helly R in some capacity but who even knows what his goals are at this point.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago (6 children)

I'm cautiously optimistic there's something else Helly R and Mark S can do (or think they can do) and we just don't know where they're running to yet. Mark S knows his work is done, especially after what he did to Drummond, regardless of what he thinks about his outie's motivations. If you were at that exit stairwell (can he even use it? Helly couldn't 🤷) and you knew that life inside was 100% hopeless then surely you'd take your chances with your outie's reintegration.

OTC was a convenient plot development for making the situation more flexible and it wouldn't surprise me if we see another.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Lumon hired and severed a lot of people to have a kickarse band on that floor. I... don't mind I guess?

 

I was thinking back to the first episode when Mark nearly ran over Helena in the car park, providing a confirmation "oh hey he really doesn't recognise her".

Knowing what we do now though,

  1. Did Mark not realise that he nearly ran over one of the Lumon leadership? He acts as if she was just some random employee.
  2. Why is Helena walking to an old car in the outer reaches of the car park when she is so senior and tends to get driven around? (Maybe the flowers she's carrying are a clue?)
 

Two independent groups of researchers have identified a total of 6 vulnerabilities in rsync. In the most severe CVE, an attacker only requires anonymous read access to a rsync server, such as a public mirror, to execute arbitrary code on the machine the server is running on.

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