

$0.26/hour is pretty good!
Your friendly local programmer, uni student and *nix addict.


$0.26/hour is pretty good!


At least five years. Even if the company goes under tomorrow, it’ll be a while before the mainboard is truly obsolete. The main “consumable” would be the battery, which I can probably hack a replacement for if official parts are no longer available.


I’ve had mine (first generation 13" model) for over a year now. I’m very happy with it, and I intend to make it last me through university (3 years) and then some. I would consider it a good investment for me.


… Eh, no. I’ve seen GPT generate some incredibly unsound C despite being given half a page of text on the problem.


You forget that many people live in areas where passenger rail infrastructure is not economically (or practically) viable. I, for one, pity the grain truck that has to drive over an unpaved road.
I don’t know about dangerous, but case-insensitive Unicode comparison is annoying, expensive and probably prone to footguns compared to a simple byte-for-byte equality check.
Obviously, it can be done, but I guess Linux devs don’t consider it worthwhile.
(And yes, all modern filesystems support Unicode. Linux stores them as arbitrary bytes, Apple’s HFS uses… some special bullshit, and Windows uses UTF-16.)
The Rocinante is an obvious pick.
I also really like the ships in Starfield, mainly because I’m a cassette futurism shill.
Most of them, yes. The reddest stars (like Proxima Centauri) are too cool and dim to be visible to the naked eye, but if you go somewhere with no light pollution and let your eyes adjust you should be able to perceive some differences between stars.
Most of the more exotic colors (such as green) are caused by various optical tricks.
Physically speaking, all true stars are roughly one of these colors:
The exact color of a star depends on its size/temperature. Red stars are the coolest, while blue stars are the hottest.
This is what we in the business call a “skill issue.”
There are ways around it, yes. But none of them are plug-and-play unless you’re lucky, and a reliable solution will require a combination of technical ability, stealth and social engineering.
Just read a book my man.


Care to clue me in? I spend my time far, far away from the web dev sphere :p


After seeing the various forms of black magic Nintendo devs have pulled off with what is essentially decade-old tablet hardware… yeah, fine by me.


Off the top of my head, for those that are curious:
However, the utter incompetence of the USSR is very accurate.


In before one of them starts stripping or firewalling the phone-home code. What’s Unity gonna do? Valve hasn’t signed any contracts with them!


But an extra fee will be charged if a user installs a game on a second device, say a Steam Deck after installing a game on a PC.
Actually asinine.
Bevy is definitely nice, but it’s probably a bridge too far for (say) an indie team moving off Unity. (Rust learning curve + ECS learning curve + no editor yet + still pre 1.0)
Love it for personal projects though.


I wonder if distributors could get away with doing that automatically. My gut instinct tells me that Unity isn’t stupid enough for that to be feasible long term, but… like you say, the C-suite bozos clearly aren’t listening to the engineers.


Every other engine is smelling blood in the water it seems


For the sake of your sanity, I hope there’s a resolution to this that doesn’t involve a rewrite.
A few posters I bought from the campus poster sale at the start of the year. (Specifically, a woodblock print, a solar system map and a Cowboy Bebop poster.)
I have a huge window with a nice view (in a university owned apartment no less!) so I can afford to skimp on the other walls.