One of the people reverse engineering the M1 GPU for Asahi Linux is a catgirl vtuber: https://www.youtube.com/asahilina
coder
One of the people reverse engineering the M1 GPU for Asahi Linux is a catgirl vtuber: https://www.youtube.com/asahilina
Nah… wrap entire templates in @if
statements.
It’s kinda amazing how someone can work so hard to sabotage their own public image.
Interesting. I didn’t realize Wayland was so extendible. I wonder if that means we can do a konfabulator clone.
There was a ton of software sourcecode posted to the comp.sources.unix
usenet group that I wanted to check out. The problem is all that software was in shar format, and there was no way to extract those files on msdos. I found Yggdrasil Linux on CD at a local software store and decided to check it out. Been using Linux in one form or another ever since.
Gdb doesn’t work at all on m1 macs
There’s also apropos
which does the same thing but for some reason is easier for me to remember.
I follow Lina on mastodon, and it’s just funny to me that cutting edge Linux video driver development is live streamed by a Japanese cat girl vtuber.
Are you me? I do the exact same thing… only I also made a Makefile to do all the stow commands for me.
I think I kind of dislike the generalization on generation.
There’s a lot of pitfalls in that direction… but there’s also no denying that there’s an entire generation of people who grew up equating using computers with programming computers.
Our Apple IIs and C64s booted into BASIC. That was the interface you learned. Just using the computer literally involved programming, even if it was tangential. My grade school “computer class” where we learned how to use a computer, was focused on programming the turtle to move around the screen with LOGO. I remember a time when “repeat” was the longest word I knew how to spell because of that class.
Basically, you have to go out of your way to learn how to program today, involving downloading specialized software etc. In the 80s, you were ankle deep in programming just by turning the computer on.
You still worked for the same company… programmers job trees aren’t that deep. Either you got promoted out of programming or the promotion isn’t worth mentioning.
2 years seems insane to me. I wouldn’t hire anyone who has a resume full of job hopping every other year.
I would fix that bug but the complete rewrite that management has had me working on for the past two years will make it obsolete anyway.