@Wolf480pl I doubt it, librarians are all about sharing.
Real Librarians™ curate, archive and share their emojos so that current and future generations have free access. >:3
@Wolf480pl I doubt it, librarians are all about sharing.
Real Librarians™ curate, archive and share their emojos so that current and future generations have free access. >:3
@phryk I was referring to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Librarian_(franchise)
@phryk maybe they all belong to The Library, and if you have any, The Librarian will take it form you and say "This is property of The Library"
If you have a 100Mbps cable connection and a 300GB data cap, you're only allowed to use it 8.3 hours per month. 50Mbps LTE and a 10GB cap? 33 minutes per month.
I've asked my senators to introduce legislation requiring ISPs to include how much time per month you're allowed to use their services at full speed in any advertising.
@cjd I don't think nah, when specifying the delay of load, you don't have to know how long it will take. You just specify as big delay as you can w/o adding NOPs, and if the load doesn't finish in that time, CPU will stall. At least that's what Mill does.
The most relevant difference is that the instruction reodering is moved from CPU to the compiler, so you can control it, which also means you can control speculation.
TIL every OS will have to unmap kernel from regular processes' virtual memory, and do 2 fuckin' TLB flushes on every syscall, because Intel has a CPU bug in speculative execution.
https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/01/02/intel_cpu_design_flaw/
I accidentally created a mult-user chatroom on XMPP, it's fediverse@conference.neko.im
and then people from fediverse started joining so... I guess you could join too if you use XMPP and are bored
@quad if we want to keep it in the theme of low-effort jokes, it should be:
- you
- your mother
@rx14 how would you feed it tho...
@rx14 yeah I know :/
@rx14 can I borrow a 20mbps of yours?
@quad is it really communist tho? or is it still capitalist?
@rx14 developing on prod, eh?
@rx14 that's why you first do it in an experimental setting, and then publish the research results so that everyone knows if it's a good idea or not... or sth like that... or just timeleap and prevent invention of that thing...
@rx14 and still be able to decide "nah, the experiment failed, this VR thingy only makes things worse" and roll it back, right? Just in case it's not as wonderful as we think it would be.
@rx14 hm... makes sense... if it was up to me, I'd write a converter from some nice one-file-per-service format (maybe even systemd format, it's not a bad one) to the s6 format. s6 one's advantage is that it's easy to parse, because there's nothing to parse.
@rx14 what's your problem with deep directory structures?
@rx14 debian tried that
@rx14 oh, ok
@rx14 aside from pid1, what else does an init need? o.O
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