- TheCycoONE parentlua does not preserve compatibility between minor versions. As such they don't need to reserve words for future use.
- I have a question. Does the directed / no cycles aspect mean that webhooks / callbacks are forbidden.
I work a lot in the messaging space (SMS,Email); typically the client wants to send a message and wants to know when it reached its destination (milliseconds to days later). Unless the client is forbidden from also being the report server which feels like an arbitrary restriction I'm not sure how to apply this.
- I have strong Tawney Scrawny Lion and Un loup dans le potager vibes from this commercial. Delightful.
- It sounded like they were encouraging dnsmasq for home use. I migrated to that successfully. My DHCPv6 is working flawlessly now whereas I was never able to get it running smoothly/persistently on ISC.
I understand Kea has more features so I'm a little curious what I'm missing.
- Turns out Linux needed a stable abi for games and Wine provided.
- Sure, t2bot and OOYE discord bridges have told us they are not yet compatible and still months away.
The appservice-irc bridge has this issue which is more of a question: https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-appservice-irc/issues/1... which hasn't been answered.
These are keeping our space on an earlier version.
- I apologize if it was mentioned anywhere but has there been any retrospectives on the August security update and v12 room roll out.
The v12 room upgrade in particular seems to be difficult, and still not supported by many of the bridges. Is there a plan to force upgrade all rooms on matrix.org at some point?
- I held a similar opinion several years ago. The main thing is that lua has less magic than js largely because it's been allowed to break compatibility.
My main example is self in lua which is just the first argument of a function with some syntactic sugar vs this in javascript which especially before 'bind' often tripped people up. The coercion rules are also simpler largely by virtue of making 0 true.
- Sure that's an option, most distros continue to include every lua version back to at least 5.1; and since luaJIT stayed there a lot of the rest of the community did too.
I guess I'm not sure what advantage lua has in that regard: you could stick to an old version of any language, including node, which was called out as being hard to keep up with.
- Lua 5.1 to 5.2 was a fairly significant breaking change; one that has forked the community to this day with luaJIT never coming on board. 5.2 to 5.3 also broke things with the introduction of integers but mostly at the level of bindings. There is also very little included in terms of standard library and while luarocks exists many significant packages go abandoned. There are breaking language changes in the upcoming 5.5 as well though they are relatively minor.[1]
All to say I think if long term compatibility is the primary goal there are probably better languages.
Have you already discounted php or perl?
- SC4 with the NAM mod sounds more in line with your expectations https://www.sc4nam.com/docs/feature-guides/the-nam-traffic-s...
- Skeeter is blue but represents black; Ice king is blue but almost certainly white. I don't know where Megamind fits in; and the Smurfs are almost certainly 'other'.
I think you're onto something.
- Public key pinning was rejected so you just need your proxy to also supply a certificate that's trusted by your clients.
- This comment got me thinking how relative the centre is to your experience, ideology, and perhaps the particular policies being referenced.
From my vantage point the US has never in my lifetime been remotely left of centre, they are moving from right to slightly further right.
DEI hiring is of course an easy target. It's a weak policy to tackle a complicated problem with obvious flaws and no track record of success. I think a truly left wing society would have quickly replaced it with more direct policies to hit generational poverty - EU style public education comes to mind.
- SMAC had network and hot seat multi-player. It didn't come with a server or any form of matchmaking but I remember playing some games over the internet in the early 2000s. Probably through MSN Gaming Zone but I can't be certain.
- Is this a little like King of Dragon Pass?
- Since no one answered you, HIP is a compile time target, you use hipify to transform your cuda code, then you compile it with hipcc, and hopefully everything works; or you target HIP directly.
ZLUDA was a translation layer, ala wine for cuda applications.
- Libreboot supports these machines, which removes the ChromeOS splash screen and the linux kernel size and signing restrictions, otherwise you'll hit problems trying to install the current version of ArchLinuxARM.
There are several guides here: https://libreboot.org/docs//install/chromebooks.html
I used external flashing https://libreboot.org/docs//install/spi.html to replace the firmware because I couldn't get it to write through software. If I recall correctly the write protect is much harder to reach than the chip.
After doing the external flashing once, it is easy to update the ROM with the Chrome fork of flashrom.
Also huge shout out to Alyssa for the panfrost gpu drivers. There was a time when I was following that development very closely and it made a night/day difference to the linux experience.
- I think the author missed that we are criticising typescript's enum implementation not the concept of enums in general.
They transcribe to something better defined in javascript. Typescript itself akwardly sits on the fence of almost entirely erasable and some decisions only make sense if that was the goal, like import files having a js rather than the ts extension that would point to the file in source.
Enums become javascript objects in a very leaky abstraction full of footguns. There are plenty of articles that cover these and this author seems to have written them off as 'not holding it right' but a good language feature fits in the hand naturally to stretch the analogy.
- The 7900 models are all 1100, the 7800XT is 1101 and the 7600 is 1102.
See Shader ISA: https://www.techpowerup.com/gpu-specs/radeon-rx-7600-xt.c419...
- Breaking the digital lock to read the blu-ray disc was made illegal in Canada with the Copyright Modernization Act (2012). Since then the courts have said that act doesn't trump fair dealing which makes it a bit grey (I am not a lawyer) but not clearly legal.
- We run mostly Java apps with a few Go apps. What I miss with Go, maybe just because I'm not as familiar and don't know where to look, is all the runtime analysis that's built in. Thread dumps, heap dumps, and even flight recorder profiling is all built in to the JVM so it works with all apps everywhere. When a Go app suddenly slows down it's very difficult to determine why unless the app was coded to provide the right metrics.
- Babel, prettier, and oxidase for a few examples all output JS. JS -> WASM doesn't tend to be very useful as WASM can't hit the DOM or most APIs.
- A day in the life or Crosscountry Canada for the edgyness. Robot R&D for fun but I don't remember actually trying to pass the tests in it.
A lot of hours with a mostly absent gr. 5 teacher.
- > The US military is the largest socialist jobs program in the world and is the single greatest creator of skilled labor for our economy.
This sounds an awful lot like the broken window fallacy. Wars are destructive and any amount spent on that destruction is lost from the economy no matter how many people you hire in the process. Surely funding schools would be a more direct way of creating skilled labour.
- Wayland seems like an odd entry in that list. It's mostly a strugle for people because it's not the monolith X was and now we have dozens or hundreds of different applications from different vendors to cover a subset of the functionality that was built in. In that sense X was the complex monolith that is extremely difficult to replace.
Also unlike the complaints about systemd in the article, Wayland is well suited to embedded. Automotive Grade Linux was an early adopter. It's desktop usage that has taken longer.
- Multiple, before this she wrote panfrost for ARM mali GPUs starting in 2018.
- In some RDBMS a foreign key will automatically create an index: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.4/en/create-table-foreign...
I think this falls under the read the documentation fully point.
Edit: It occurs to me you likely meant on the column itself rather than on the referenced column. I don't have an example that does that.
- It is in many countries, and I'm not American but I understand the WARN act provides defacto severence as few employers are willing to risk keeping an employee after they have been notified.