Back in the 80386 days there was one model of BIOS that would print ‘CPU not found’ if you had your CRT monitor and VGA videocard plugged in.
Back in the 80386 days there was one model of BIOS that would print ‘CPU not found’ if you had your CRT monitor and VGA videocard plugged in.
wcsoll is a mispronunciation of wcscoll
Go here and Ctrl-C / Ctrl-V
I especially like ⨹
C₊𝅄⨧⁺ᐩ is used for building firmware for hyperdimensional singularity processors.
Then there’s no point. Converting the code to Rust as-is will also transfer all the bugs.
I guess it will translate the majority of the code which does not contain unsafe parts, and leave the pointer manipulation for manual rewrite.
It’s just bots bypassing bot filter. Most platforms now restrict activity of new user accounts to combat spam, so bot farms create new accounts, create some spam posts, wait two-three months until these accounts become unrestricted, then post some political ads en masse.
Ask the guy to hold down the wolves while I teach them how to install Debian
You also have CLOCK_MONOTONIC, which could or could not be the number of seconds since last reboot.
To be honest, this mess was directly inherited from POSIX C system calls.
Yup, Cortex A7 has some crypto HW acceleration with Neon extensions
https://developer.arm.com/Processors/Cortex-A7
But routers typically won’t decrypt any traffic, they just route it. Bus, RAM and cache speed is more of a bottleneck.
Tech specs are right in between ESP32 and Raspberry PI Zero. This would make a nice OpenWRT router or torrent server, if you can solder some external Ethernet chip on it.
“Lays out a girthy steaming log in the CPU performance graph”
Just do a quick simple sudo apt-get install task-kde-desktop
It’s false that you cannot sell GPL-licensed work.
Busybox was quickly replaced by BSD-licensed Toybox everywhere for that exact reason.
Copyleft licenses (like the Gnu General Public License) mandate that all derivative works remain free.
This is false. It’s perfectly legal to take GPL-licensed work, modify it, and sell it. As long as the work itself does not reach the general public, you don’t need to release it’s source code to the public (e.g. your work for the military, you take money for your work, and provide source code to them, but not release it publicly).
It’s made worse by the fact C++11 made a lot of solutions for the deep problems in the language. As the C++ tradition dictates, the problems themselves are carefully preserved for backward compatibility, the solutions are like a whole different language.
And Lisp is small - the first Google result provides a Lisp interpreter in 117 lines of Python code.
C++ is OVERWHELMINGLY SUPERIOR, if you ask any professional C++ developer.
Nope. They don’t care about privacy, as long as there’s no lawsuit.
Debian 12. It just works, except for buggy Wayland, thankfully KDE still supports Xorg.
I stopped reading after this. Why do you think C++ is unsafe in the first place? Someone decided ro extend it, and now you cannot even read an error message without finishing an university course on lambda calculus first.