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retrocryptid

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YouTube Video Critiques Facebook's Push into the Metaverse

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2 points·by retrocryptid·4 miesiące temu·1 comments

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retrocryptid
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
Oh man. I was just reminded of ClearCase and Perforce and sort of threw up a little in the back of my mouth. You young whipper-snappers who didn't have to use ClearCase and have only used hg or git don't know how bad it could be. When ClearCase was properly configured, it was fine. But having used it at IBM, DSCCC and Bell Canada, only IBM managed it properly. At DSCCC, we had 40 Sun workstations on a single thin-net segment, each of them trying to mount an NFS share from ClearCase. You had to get there at 6AM to be one of the first five people to log in because if you didn't it was unlikely you COULD even log in. I kept a copy of the part of the code I was working with on a tape and would go into the lab and restore it from tape, do some work, then back it up to tape at the end of the day (the lab machines were reformatted at midnight every day.)

But... yes... this is just using NFS locally to see what's already in GIT, which is perfectly find and as Julia says, allows you to appreciate the structure of the git repo. Ignore this old man yelling at clouds.
retrocryptid
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
That being said... it's actually somewhat uncommon for humans to drive into flooded streets. To the degree that people think it's notable enough to take videos and post them to social media. I don't have the data, but would be interested to see how many times per passenger mile travelled human-directed and remotely-operated vehicles like Weymos drove into flooded streets.

I can appreciate the cameras and lidar on the Weymos don't give their remote operators a lot of good data about the depth of water on the road-way. As you point out, humans in cars often don't get this right. I think the humans that don't drive into deep water are the ones who a) give any amount of water on the roadway a big NOPE and b) people familiar with the local environment and use multiple visual clues to judge the true depth of the flooding.
retrocryptid
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
I thought Weymo's were supposed to be "supervised" by humans in the Philippines. Maybe driving in circles in the suburbs and driving into flood waters happens only when the cars are out of mobile data range? Did Weymo pay their mobile phone bill? Does the (somewhat) autonomous system on the car decide when to flag a human for help? I would have expected a human to be watching all the time. Are they experiencing labor problems in the Philippines? Maybe Weymo doesn't want to pay their remote operators as much as the remote operators want to get paid?
retrocryptid
·2 miesiące temu·discuss
NICE!
retrocryptid
·2 miesiące temu·discuss


      Natalie mentions  the Newman &  Nagel's text "Gödel's  Proof," a
      (//the//?) 1958 classic on the subject. [[ 1 ]]  Having left IBM
      in December  1990, I spent a  month with the text,  dipping into
      mild insanity, taking to strange  wines to relieve myself of the
      fear that my previous years  long study of Whitehead & Russell's
      "Principia Mathematica" [[ 2 ]] was useless.
   
      I  really  appreciate  the  inclusion of  Alvir's  statement  on
      whether  or not  Gödel  thought he  proved  all logical  systems
      undecidable and incomplete.   About 80% into the  article is her
      quote:
   
      >> Often people will speak as if  the CH is the smoking gun that
      >> shows sometimes  mathematical questions have no  answer.  But
      >> in my  opinion, this situation provides  very little evidence
      >> that   there   are  “absolutely   undecidable”   mathematical
      >> problems, relative to any given permissible framework.
   
      Though  I  would have  added  a  reference to  Infinitary  Logic
      [[ 3 ]]  after dropping  the  reference  to L-omega-1-omega.   I
      suspect most  readers would find discussion  of higher-order and
      modern logic a bit confusing  without a pause for further study.
      But a guide post pointing  in the appropriate direction would be
      good.

      That this is  the only critique I have of  the article speaks to
      Wolchover's  skill  in communicating  complex  ideas  for a  lay
      audience.  I really  liked this article, so  thank you @baruchel
      for posting the reference to it.
   
   :: References
   
      1. https://search.worldcat.org/title/1543160023
   
      2. https://search.worldcat.org/title/933122838
   
      3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinitary_logic
retrocryptid
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
I just hope they stop him before he nukes the west coast. He said something about ending a society, I just wonder if he meant he wanted to to nuke San Francisco.
retrocryptid
·3 miesiące temu·discuss
Data point: A couple years ago I worked for a company that calculated sales tax for customers. They had developed expertise in knowing where each jurisdiction kept it's tax code and how to turn that tax code into software. I was peripherally involved in a proof-of-concept where a reasonably well skilled team trained some sort of model on tax code for one US state. They demoed it to the board of directors where one of the directors asked a somewhat complex question.

The model returned an answer that looked legit, but after the board meeting someone pointed out that the answer was wrong and had we given this answer to a paying customer, we might have been criminally liable. I'm not sure who would have been criminally liable. I don't think they would arrest the entire company.

This was over two years ago and Claude seems to be getting MUCH better over the last year, so maybe things are better now. But, as the Russians say, "доверяй, но проверяй" (trust, but verify.)
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
Modern operating systems are designed for three things:

1. Serve ads.

2. Consume content.

3. Compress audio and video input and upload it to someone's servers.

None of these requires a responsive UI. Ticket closed, works as designed.
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
I can move bloatware icons off the main screen on android. That's different from uninstalling them.

Your assertion was that Apple disallowed carriers from loading up phones with bloatware. So what? So did other phones. That there exist phones with bloatware does not imply that all non-apple phones are festooned with bloatware and all Apple phones are free of bloatware except safari.

But if your assertion is to be interpreted as anything else it's a distinction without a difference.
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
So... if I take Mach and use it as the basis of a product for a different company, does that company get to say it's Unix? Or does the Unix moniker only apply to products released by Apple? If so, why?
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
But your assertion was every phone before the iPhone had bloatware.

The Nokia 3390 was a phone.

Please tell me what bloatware was on the 3390.
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
But... the assertion was "every phone" before the iPhone was festooned with bloatware and the iPhone was the first phone not to have it.

This is nonsense. Downloading ringtones isn't bloatware. Charging users to transfer pictures isn't bloatware.

The Nokia 3390 was not burdened with bloatware. Neither was the Treo 180 or the Nokia 9500i. And my G1 didn't have bloatware.

It's ridiculous to say the iPhone was the first phone without bloatware.

But if your point is Verizon was trying to monetize their customer base after the first sale, then I would heartily agree.
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
This isn't exactly a "tech heavy" user community.
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
Okay. What bloatware did Verizon put on my Treo?

Also. You didn't answer the question. What bloatware did Verizon put on my Nokia 3390?
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
This means that Apple has licensed the right to use the Unix(r) trademark, not that they have the right to use code from AT&T or its successors (USL, Novell, SCO, Caldera &c). It means that Apple will not be sued if they call macOS Unix, but it most assuredly did not use code from the SVR lineage.
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
And it's a brilliant idea for small businesses. People are already familiar with it and trust Apple. I mean... I'm a BSD & Leenooks person and generally have a decent opinion of apple products. They just don't do what I want to do. But square piggy-backing on Apple's reputation was a great idea.
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
So... sections of the comments here have made some assertions about the history of Unix and Mach (and I guess Leenucks by extension) which aren't supported by the factual record. As a service, I have posted a link to the Wikipedia page on the history of Unix over here:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36349883

It might be useful to ask questions or make comments about Unix, Mach, Leenooks, Solaris, HPUX, IRIX, ConvexOS, AIX, A/UX or plain ol' SVR4 over there. Or heck... keep doing it here. I'm not your mother. Just seems off topic for this discussion so I spun up another thread over there.
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
Square ships iPads, most of the other payment terminals are some brand of leenucks (some are android, some are not.) There are more WinCE terminals still out there than you would expect (verifone's been around for a LONG time and has probably used every embedded toolchain/cpu architecture/rtos that's come down the pike. And that's just one example.)

IBM 4690's supposedly run a SuSe derivative, and Walmart doesn't seem to be replacing them with iPads. I think Sears & KMart also used 4690s, but also a mix of predecessor systems which ran an unholy assemblage of OSes: flex, dos, a bizarre mix of Os/36 and IMS, etc. As best I can tell, they never ran an OS from CMU.

Next time you're in a gas station, grocery store, cinema or chain restaurant look closely at the cash register. It's not an iPad.

Square did a mightily brilliant thing to marry its dongle to a consumer friendly iPad to support small retail, but apple is not in the business of selling PoS systems. Heck, apple stores didn't use apple devices for PoS for the first two or three years after they were launched.

The assertion that iPads are "taking over" PoS seems to be based on an inappropriately small sample.
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
Um... what Unix (tm) product does Apple sell. They stopped selling A/UX decades ago and it's a bit of a stretch to call AIX Unix. And Mach is absolutely NOT Unix.

Saying that Apple is a Unix vendor because of Mach/Darwin/NeXTStep and Android/Google, Red Hat/IBM, Ubuntu/Canonical, Amazon/Amazon Linux aren't Unix vendors because they're Linux is an interesting take.

By that logic we could call MSFT a Unix vendor 'cause they once sold Xenix and NT originally shipped with BSD networking code.
retrocryptid
·3 lata temu·discuss
[Citation needed]

What bloatware was verizon installing on my Nokia 3390?