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SinePost

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Entertainment Computer System

en.wikipedia.org
1 points·by SinePost·5 months ago·0 comments

Spring 83: a draft protocol intended to suggest new ways of relating online

github.com
89 points·by SinePost·last year·21 comments

Fainting Goat

en.wikipedia.org
2 points·by SinePost·last year·0 comments

The Postmodern Build System

jade.fyi
3 points·by SinePost·2 years ago·0 comments

Olivetti M20

en.wikipedia.org
3 points·by SinePost·2 years ago·0 comments

comments

SinePost
·last year·discuss
> “But it turns out there aren’t that many pictures of dogs and cats and sheep on the internet”—at least not ones where it’s clear how the animals are feeling, he says.

Sheep I can understand -- most people online are urban and the people who upload the most are urban -- but it also was difficult to find relevant pictures of housepets?
SinePost
·2 years ago·discuss
I'll narrow the scope to "OSS software that is common and where its license is not a selling point to most of its users." KHTML/Chromium/WebKit (to Internet Explorer), Firefox, MySQL, BSD (to AT&T Unix), GCC, LLVM, GIMP, InkScape, VLC to name a few.
SinePost
·2 years ago·discuss
I can. Any of the free BSDs (of which FreeBSD is one of them).
SinePost
·3 years ago·discuss
1. Desktop which also functions as a server.

2. Centralized documentation, board of directors versus benevolent dictator for life, faster network stack, fewer GNU tools in the base install, ports tree, license.

3. ZFS, Linuxulator, documentation, community, familiarity.

4. Hardware support, especially power management (ACPI, SpeedStep, etc.) on laptops that are not ThinkPads or Dell Latitudes. Wayland.

5. The FreeBSD handbook.

The biggest problem with the BSDs are not the operating systems themselves, but the network effect surrounding GNU/Linux causing developers to completely overlook them, going on to create bodies of code that are not easy to port or in some cases impossible (Systemd, Wayland).
SinePost
·3 years ago·discuss
It is quite refreshing to see software optimization be explained so simply and elegantly.
SinePost
·3 years ago·discuss
It is also available to read online for free.

https://web.mit.edu/6.001/6.037/sicp.pdf (Second edition)

https://sicp.sourceacademy.org/sicpjs.pdf (JavaScript edition)
SinePost
·3 years ago·discuss
The "Final Verdict" is very plain and is hardly enhanced by reading the body of the article. It would make more sense if it was put in the opening of the article, creating a complete abstract.
SinePost
·3 years ago·discuss
It absolutely has. I don't think I can live without doing it anymore. I started in middle school and am currently in college. Being so close to me, it's not formal at all, being more like a stream of consciousness filled with anything I think is particularly interesting to myself. I don't do it according to any set schedule; just as I am not equally energetic and insightful every single day, I am not equally productive every day.

If I don't write something down, I forget it and move on to the next idea. While I rarely read what I have written, it is a massive benefit by itself to commit to paper what I am thinking because the process of transforming a pool of unorganized, but related thoughts into something resembling a cohesive idea that can be told linearly is invaluable in resolving contradictions and evaluating their value. I prefer to handwrite because I don't think in ASCII (or Unicode, or LaTeX, or any other computer format). Ninety-nine cent composition notebooks and commodity rollerball pens are all I need.
SinePost
·3 years ago·discuss
This spring, I completed a data structures course at a large state school. We used Java at our university because Princeton did, and I imagine Princeton did because of the ease of segmenting concepts into classes because Java bytecode is the same between the students' devices and the machines which were used to grade their assignments (our grades were determined as a fraction of the number of test-cases our code would pass).
SinePost
·3 years ago·discuss
What advantages does this offer over something like typing "$QUERY -site:*.com" into a mainstream search engine? I think webmasters in general do a pretty good job at self-segregating their sites into commercial and non-commercial entities through the use of different top-level domains.
SinePost
·3 years ago·discuss
That doesn't actually sound very different from my experience with major search engines beyond the first page. I've taken it as a bit of an law that the Internet outside of large centralized and/or moderated sites gets very fringe very quickly. Since the whole point of the search engine is to display noncommercial sites, users will inevitably face thousands of self-published blogs of varying beliefs, quality, and truthiness. As these fringe sites take up more domain names by total volume than mainstream platforms (there is only one Twitter, Facebook, et al.), I am not surprised at all that they seem to be even more voluminous here than on commercial search engines.
SinePost
·4 years ago·discuss
I second this question. I've used both before; the user experience is basically the same, and there's no audible difference between the two.