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sagacity

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Cost of enum-to-string: C++26 reflection vs. the old ways

vittorioromeo.com
96 points·by sagacity·2 months ago·179 comments

Fret is a GPU-first Rust UI framework

github.com
1 points·by sagacity·3 months ago·1 comments

Data Inheritance

github.com
2 points·by sagacity·3 months ago·0 comments

Resurrecting Sinistar: A Cyber-Archaeology Documentary [video]

youtube.com
3 points·by sagacity·3 months ago·0 comments

The Streams Standard

domenic.me
1 points·by sagacity·4 months ago·0 comments

Yakuza creator's new game in doubt as NetEase pulls funding

polygon.com
2 points·by sagacity·4 months ago·0 comments

The year of the 3D printed miniature and other lies we tell ourselves

matduggan.com
201 points·by sagacity·6 months ago·150 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by sagacity·8 months ago·0 comments

Zed is our office

zed.dev
627 points·by sagacity·8 months ago·331 comments

There can be more than Notion and Miro

github.com
4 points·by sagacity·9 months ago·1 comments

Superbase on the Commodore 64

stonetools.ghost.io
1 points·by sagacity·9 months ago·0 comments

Sega AI Computer

en.m.wikipedia.org
1 points·by sagacity·10 months ago·0 comments

comments

sagacity
·21 days ago·discuss
The article is about arcade games.
sagacity
·2 months ago·discuss
You can just right-click and hide it, though.
sagacity
·2 months ago·discuss
It also really depends on whether you pick your battles or not. If an engineer complains every detail of a system then you get a "boy who cried wolf" effect at some point.
sagacity
·2 months ago·discuss
This is genuinely a really fun way to browse Wikipedia. Only drawback is that folder names that contain ellipsis don't show the full name when clicked.
sagacity
·2 months ago·discuss
Oof, that first example (the idiomatic C++26 way) looks so foreign if you're mostly used to C++11.
sagacity
·2 months ago·discuss
Clearly if that was the actual issue I would've been able to get it working :)

The thing is, I was online, I had a working internet connection (and confirmed this by doing the 'utilman' hang to get a command prompt and getting a working ping command). It was just that Windows corrupted some kind of internal Microsoft Account connection and was locking me out.
sagacity
·2 months ago·discuss
I've reinstalled using this trick, so this issue won't bite me again in the future.
sagacity
·2 months ago·discuss
Yeah, so, to be clear: I'm fairly sure Linux will also have its fair share of issues that I occasionally would have to repair.

I don't necessarily even have a problem with Windows occasionally needing a bit of hand-holding, either. It sucks, but it's IT so meh, unfortunately it still comes with the territory.

What I'm mostly pissed off about is the fact that I have a perfectly useable machine but since I'm unable to login due to vague Microsoft nonsense and there doesn't seem to be a way to fix it I need to reinstall. This seems wholly unnecessary.

Even having some sort of repair installation that doesn't blow away all installed applications would have been somewhat ok as a last resort, but that doesn't exist either.
sagacity
·2 months ago·discuss
I recently got locked out of my machine because logging in with the mandatory Microsoft account-backed primary user of my machine didn't work anymore. It said I was offline and I had to use the "previous password" even though I didn't have a previous password for that account.

Hacking around in the recovery console to add another administrator user worked, but then I couldn't reset the original user's password because it was tied to the Microsoft account and you can't change the password locally.

I don't need Copilot managing my inbox through AI, nor do I need a more exciting widget experience.

I just want an OS where if something like the above happens there's a way to fix it without having to reinstall. It doesn't seem like much to ask.

Edit: yes, I can use Linux but I have decades of Windows muscle memory and I do a bunch of DirectX programming. I shouldn't have to switch :)
sagacity
·2 months ago·discuss
Sure, but do you diagnose cables so often that you need a permanent icon in the menu bar?

Following that logic, every application you use more than a handful of times should live there.

Anyway. I'm not trying to argue, I think this is a neat tool, but when the Windows tray got bloated with icons people used to complain about it.
sagacity
·2 months ago·discuss
This is pretty nice, but why do a lot of Mac apps insist on living in the menu bar?
sagacity
·2 months ago·discuss
Ah yes, like those EUV machines America and China have worked on.
sagacity
·3 months ago·discuss
Dreams uses SDFs though?
sagacity
·3 months ago·discuss
To be fair, it's mostly an evergreen skill because people don't know how to exit.
sagacity
·3 months ago·discuss
The argument is that it is older software in the sense that it's unmaintained because better alternatives exist.

Also, I don't believe it is fair to dismiss skeptics as inventing reasons. If anything, "believers" are bending over backwards to praise Anthropic even though they didn't actually release anything.
sagacity
·3 months ago·discuss
There are plenty of size limited competitions, too (256 bytes, 4k, 8k, 64k) and competitions for old-school platforms.
sagacity
·4 months ago·discuss
This is a fun exercise, but I'm surprised that someone is just dropping nearly $1600 to do so.
sagacity
·4 months ago·discuss
The pricing issue is valid, though. It's hard to use a lot of these tools in anger without having to go to fairly expensive plans.
sagacity
·4 months ago·discuss
Do you really need an excuse to buy more gear? meme-be-honest.jpg
sagacity
·4 months ago·discuss
Actually, visiting from The Netherlands showed me a popup congratulating me on the quality of our postal code system.