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Posted on 19-04-20, 19:46 in MS is about to release a discless Xbone, this time for real! (revision 1)

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Posted by tomman
Xbox Too

Or “Xbox To.”
Slogan: “Their it is, you’re new Xbox.”

Now that I think of it, "Xbox Tú" would actually be creative.

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Posted by JieFK
Coincidentally, a mail was posted today on Dng that gives a few flags to pass to your kernel command line to disable those patches :
https://lists.dyne.org/lurker* JieFKssage/20190516.104800.1d3cc002.en.html
Almost the same as tomman's post above.

We just need the last one now, mitigations=off. Thankfully, someone had some sense and realized these aren't exploitable without already giving a person significant access to a system. The only reason we're seeing such panic is because most kernel programmers work for virtualization providers.
Posted on 19-05-25, 16:35 in GNOME: "Please don't theme our apps"

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As a GTK app developer:
"Please theme my apps. The Adwaita theme uses too much whitespace for no reason, preventing programs from being information-dense. Also, I want you to feel comfortable using your computer. Thanks.'
Posted on 19-06-02, 20:07 in Regarding Super Famicom.bml

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You’re probably breaking the encoding when you save the file. The indentation and encoding should be intact. If you’re using Windows notepad, don’t. It’ll screw up any UTF8 files by adding a marker.
Posted on 19-06-03, 00:16 in Regarding Super Famicom.bml

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Posted by CaptainJistuce

Also, Notepad was updated end of last year to handle incomplete line-endings and I believe it respects existing byte-order mark status too.

I think the BOM fix was only just released in Windows 10 1903. Lots of people with Windows 7 still, too, so it's hard to recommend regular notepad since you have to mention all the caveats.
Posted on 19-06-07, 18:46 in GNOME: "Please don't theme our apps"

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Posted by creaothceann

Wasn't the Windows one because of hardware limitations?

I don’t think so. You can do a lot better with just black and white.
Posted on 19-06-08, 16:50 in GNOME: "Please don't theme our apps"

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Posted by CaptainJistuce
Well, yes, but that's only if you have the financial might of Xerox funding your research, or the temerity to copy Xerox's software and then sue others for ripping you off.

Windows ripped off Xerox, too, but did a terrible job with it. The original Macintosh team was a close-knit group of truly smart people who cared what they were working on. That's the reason for the better adaptation. That or if Jobs had seen something like Windows, he'd scream "That's shit! Start over!"
Posted on 19-06-10, 19:17 in Something about cheese! (revision 1)

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Posted by wertigon
So, in other words you agree with my point that IQ = Knowledge. Great! :)

Yes. IQ is nothing more than knowledge.
All IQ tests include subjects like "World History."
Suppose a person took said IQ test and missed a question about world history.
Immediately afterward, the person is taught that fact;
the person takes the IQ test again and gets a higher score.
Thus, it's proven what we call "IQ tests" don't solely measure innate intelligence. They're a load of crap. Same goes for standardized tests like SAT and ACT. I got a high score on the ACT and I'm an imbecile.

Posted by "sureanem"
Here's an interesting essay on the matter: https://www.gwern.net/Everything
Of relevance to this particular discussion is the graph from Hill et al 2018, which shows intelligence to have a genetic correlation of 82% with household income.

Missing the point? The framing article is about how to proceed with revelation of results given that correlation is not causation. What is the measure used for "intelligence", anyway? IQ like above? Then it's meaningless.

Posted by "sureanem"
I have never advocated for Social Darwinism, I don't know from where this accusation comes.

It probably comes from the fact that you're advocating social darwinism.

Posted by "sureanem"
Well, she's hardly White. But with white skin, sure.

Careful, there. Your capitalization implies something you shouldn't go into.
Posted on 19-06-11, 19:09 in Mozilla, *sigh*

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Posted by tomman
Firefox "Premium" coming Soon™:
https://news.slashdot.org/story/19/06/10/057231/a-premium-firefox-is-coming-this-fall

Mozilla has officially lost its way.

Remember when Phoenix (Firefox) came out because the Mozilla browser had too much crap, and people wanted a browser to just be a browser? Firefox premium is like “Mountain Dew: Code Red car repair.” They’re abusing the brand recognition for a quick buck.

You’re a non-profit, Mozilla, your sole purpose is your browser. Why are you trying to raise money if it’s at the expense, not benefit, of your only reason for existing? Oh, that’s right, you’re lead by asshole executives that don’t care about the company and just need more cash for illicit substances and silencing prostitutes.

Yes, I’m disgruntled. :-)
Posted on 19-06-20, 18:47 in Games You Played Today REVENGEANCE

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Posted by Screwtape

It's possible part of the difficulty comes from trying to play with a 360 pad, since neither the analog stick nor that d-pad are particularly good for nimble, precise movement. If only there was a way to use my GBA or 3DS as a controller... or maybe I should even try out the keyboard controls.

I just use an official PS4 controller. The dpad is decent and in the right place, and the wired protocol is just USB HID. Everybody is doing a competing sale on them for ~40 USD right now, but I don’t know if that extends outside NA or not.
Posted on 19-06-21, 16:30 in Games You Played Today REVENGEANCE

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Posted by Screwtape

Although I'm on Linux, so I don't really know what the interaction of "kernel drivers making the 360 pad look like any other joystick" and "wine making generic joysticks look like XInput devices" would be.

PS4 controllers are USB HID, so they're generic. The HID mapping doesn't match the expected order of the face buttons expected by Steam or whatever, so the square, cross and circle buttons are mixed up if the game has "PS4 button icons."

Speaking of wine, how's the game's performance with it? I'm deliberating whether to get it for PS4 or PC, but I might just wait until the next patch to see if the issues are ironed out.
Posted on 19-06-22, 16:36 in Games You Played Today REVENGEANCE

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Posted by Screwtape

Out of curiosity I tried installing dxvk for better DirectX 11 support, but that made the sound super-choppy. I understand that later versions of Wine implement Windows' XAudio API on top of the open source FAudio library (originally developed for Linux ports of XNA games), but the only way I can get binaries of newer Wine versions is from PlayOnLinux, and their generic Linux binaries don't always play well on Debian for whatever reason. So eventually I blew all that away and went back to Debian's standard Wine 4.2.

Lutris also has an auto-downloader for several different builds of Wine that you could try. It stores these in a user's .local/share/lutris directory. Looks like there's some debian packages.

Videos can be a pain. You could try "winetricks amstream quartz devenum" then add an entry to disable winegstreamer in the libraries section of winecfg. If it's a WMV codec, it's probably not going to work no matter what.
Posted on 19-06-22, 19:20 in Ubuntu: x86_32 is dead because WE SAY SO!

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They'll be forced to backtrack this decision, mark my words.

This is another example of dumb developer logic: "All I do is write JavaScript and play music on my computer, so that's what everyone else does!"

No, just because you use a piddly, micro-thin laptop with integrated graphics and do nothing more processor-intensive than running a web browser doesn't mean other people don't actually, you know, run programs on their computers.

I compare it to the Lennart mentality when he wrote PulseAudio. It was clear the only use case he thought of was playing music on bluetooth speakers, but it took over the whole audio system. He didn't think beyond what he needed personally.
Posted on 19-06-24, 03:35 in Ubuntu: x86_32 is dead because WE SAY SO!

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Posted by Screwtape

One additional wrinkle is that unlike other hardware, GPUs do not have a stable kernel/userspace interface. Or rather, there's several: Mesa's OpenGL libraries use one set of kernel interfaces, the nVidia OpenGL libraries use the interface provided by their proprietary kernel drivers, etc. Until now, it didn't matter too much for Steam, because Steam apps just linked against "libOpenGL.so" and at runtime they use the system-provided driver library. But if the system doesn't provide a driver library...

It’s libGL.so, but we’ve got Vulkan ICDs now and glvnd, so it’s a little more complicated.

Regardless, the number of packages needed to be provided by the OS is minimal—a couple dozen at the most. Often the only difference in a build script is adding a -m32 flag and pointing at a lib32 directory. There just wasn’t any substantive argument for the removal. Some foolish pragmatic thought he could get some street cred, but he grossly misunderstood the user base. Now they’re trying to walk it back and save face, but nobody is buying it. They need to forget the damage-control bullshit and admit they were wrong.
Posted on 19-06-24, 17:23 in Ubuntu: x86_32 is dead because WE SAY SO! (revision 1)

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Posted by Screwtape

On the other hand, although multiarch would have been useful from the first day Linux was ported to a non-x86 architecture, nobody actually bothered to *implement* multiarch until a need arose to have x86 and amd64 binaries on the same system.

No, the need was there from day one. "Multiarch" is Debian's name for its most recent repository solution, but there were definitely 32-bit libraries packaged right from the start of 64-bit x86 support. Cross-compilation from my experience is different. The target libraries are stored in a cross-compiler-specific directory, not alongside system libraries.

*edit* Forgive my misunderstanding. If I'm understanding you correctly now, you're saying the need for 32-bit on 64-bit drove multiarch support? Then yes, that's the only practical purpose. It's just an evolution of an earlier way of doing 32 on 64. They have a separate repository instead of bundled packs of 32-bit libraries in the 64-bit repository.
Posted on 19-06-26, 22:10 in I have yet to have never seen it all.

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"Tech Expert" my ass. "I use Firefox like the 1337 haxors now because I'm in the know, so I'm cool beans."
Posted on 19-06-27, 19:12 in Ubuntu: x86_32 is dead because WE SAY SO!

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I looked into Snap packages and they’re a disaster. There’s so much Ubuntu-specific crap in the spec that unless you’re relying solely on Ubuntu’s packages it’s almost impossible to create one. Flatpak was much cleaner and easy to work with by comparison.
Posted on 19-06-29, 15:37 in I have yet to have never seen it all.

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Posted by creaothceann
Summer Games Done Quick 2019

I'm amused that many of these are hour-long. The usual suspects have been done to death, so they've completely moved on to longer games. I could invest maybe 5 minutes to watch an interesting speed-run, but I don't have the attention to watch someone spend 2 hours playing Minish Cap.

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Posted by CaptainJistuce
"Windows does actually have a sensible approach to software. Each program gets its own directory and contains whatever DLL files it needs."
That's... not actually true.

Yeah, he's definitely never done any Win32 programming, let alone with a free compiler.

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Posted by sureanem
Hardly anyone except for people porting Linux software uses MinGW/Cygwin, do they? When in Rome, do as the Romans do...

Visual studio wasn’t free until recently. The free version until a couple years ago was also non-optimizing. Before that we had RSXNT, LCC, then Cygwin and Mingw. VC6 was several hundred USD at the minimum, and VC7+ only came with the more expensive Visual Studio, so nothing else was available for the aspiring young programmer.
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