@regehr If you're into this kind of heat nerdery and don't already have one, I highly recommend acquiring a thermal camera. Fancy new ones can be kind of pricey, but with a bit of craigslist-watching I snagged a decent-enough used one for <$100 recently.
All sorts of commonplace things are interesting to look at with it, like your "footprints" after walking across a floor barefoot. It's also useful for all sorts of miscellaneous troubleshooting (home, car, electronics...) and taking thoroughly eery photos of your pets.
The stories of anguish a single filename can tell.
Realized while making some updates to it that one of my most-used personal programs just turned 10 (as measured from its first commit).
Extrapolating, by 2034 it could in theory have as many as three entire users!
@shenki Something vaguely along those lines, still sort of figuring it out though...
"Know your audience"
Cheers, @corbet.
Decently pleasant view from the office window, with fall foliage colors already beginning to show.
And thus begins day 1 of trapping the wily ion...
@tj dc(1)
, or shell functions built thereupon:
$ type rpn rpnf
rpn is a function
rpn ()
{
dc -e "${*//x/*} p"
}
rpnf is a function
rpnf ()
{
rpn 10 k "$@"
}
$ rpnf 329447664 9672 811 x /
42.0000000000
@jk But is the third one a slightly larger lot, or just a worse deal?
Hahahah
"The thought came to me all at once, whole and fully crystallized, that I would like to slap a big ol' slice of bologna onto that Cybertruck."
https://defector.com/i-would-like-to-put-lunchmeat-on-the-cybertruck
@cks @0x0ddc0ffee @drscriptt
In theory I guess you could have the (soft) power switch wired to the BMC as basically a GPIO pin and then the BMC controlling the 'power switch' wired to the PCH or wherever it would go
On the platforms I've developed BMC firmware for that's pretty much exactly how it's arranged. Yes, it's more moving parts between the physical button and actually powering on the host, though often mitigated somewhat by a "GPIO pass-through" feature of popular BMC SoCs (Aspeed parts, at least), wherein you can configure the GPIO controller to basically just bridge two pins together in hardware so there's no software in between and it acts like a direct connection, which can be useful for times when the software that usually manages those GPIOs isn't able to do so for whatever reason (like during the BMC's boot sequence).
Some rocks just don't want to split even after extensive sledgehammering. Fortunately with the right blade a circular saw can make it a little easier.
Also, wow that's by a wide margin the fastest I've ever drained a 4Ah battery (and given that I guess the thermal self-protection shutoff shouldn't have been a surprise).
The verdict: very effective, would rent again (and probably will for the other half of the yard).
This week's project: back yard concrete demolition.
Started out with a rotohammer and 42" bolt cutters for the rebar. It...worked, but was very slow going, so I decided to try renting a jackhammer instead.
Found that the jackhammer was sufficiently heavy that setting it down and picking it back up (when switching between it and the crowbar) was a non-negligible fraction of the overall work -- turning the ladder and some scrap 2x4s into an improvised stand for it turned out to be a big win.
@kwf These pictures made me sort of curious about that tool and so I watched a brief video review of it, which happened to mention that the blades are reversible -- perhaps you're already aware, but might they still be intact enough to flip around and keep going?
@dannyjpalmer Oh wow, I hadn't thought about that game in a very long time! And I don't recall ever noticing the tagline on the paper, which is quite excellent.
@mxshift @danderson Can I ask what you used them for? "GHz-capable discrete logic gates" sounds like an interesting space to be in.
I wonder how much energy could be saved globally by web sites not having gratuitous constant background animations burning CPU cycles on every single client that loads the page for as long as they keep the tab open.
(This post inspired by my suddenly-audible CPU fan.)
@cks @mhoye ...except that's still prone to race conditions, because there's a non-zero (brief, but not entirely negligible) window of time between passing the point of no return on deciding to press a key or click a button and actually doing so, and if the focus-theft happens within that window you're still screwed.
I think what I want is "no program can steal input focus ever, period".
IBM's really branching out these days
@regehr ...and indeed, after a quick check so do both Seattle & King County public libraries -- DVD and streaming options, even! Nice, libraries for the win.
@regehr @aleksorsist Oh man, I've been wanting to see that for many years, but never have -- and as far as I can tell none of the major streaming services have it available. Maybe I should check the local libraries...
@david_chisnall Twist my arm...
Mine seems to somewhat regularly misplace his skeletal structure.
What's this? Signs of life from The Onion? Might it be...maybe...dare I even say it...a glimmer of de-shittification in the darkness?
Gary Clark Jr last night: pretty damn cool.
@rk @sj Except rmdir(2)
is going to fail with ENOTEMPTY
, no? You can hold an open fd for an empty directory, but then creating a new file inside it via openat
on the directory fd still fails with ENOENT
(and similarly if you hold on to it by chdir
-ing into it instead of opening it and then creating things in ".").
You could also put secrets in anonyous tempfiles, but at least on Linux other processes could still access it via /proc/$PID/fd
.
@tedu spits drink
What on earth is that from?
The fact that timingsafe_bcmp(a, b, n) != timingsafe_bcmp(b, a, n)
is a nice touch too.
Roses are red.
Roses are blue.
Depending on their velocity
relative to you.
@rk @mos_8502 In my experience AFS is mostly reasonable to use (modulo Kerberos complications and learning a new permissions system) and from an abstract design standpoint definitely the "nicest", but having once years ago briefly looked into what would be involved in setting up and running it myself I decided it made NFS look comparatively trivial and did not pursue it further.
Realistically, for the kinds of usage I'm picturing from @mos_8502's post, I'd reach for sshfs -- the setup process is basically "run sshd on server, run sshfs on client" and you're done.
@cliffle The RFC3514 approach to LLM reliability.
@rk That's like...2/3 of business web sites I've seen in the last 5 years, I think. Perhaps there's some actual nugget of real utility buried somewhere in something they provide, but discerning what it might be is utterly beyond me.
Palatial indeed.