Posts by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
(DIR) Post #9ougMSeeO9FqpCUTyK by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2019-11-13T07:56:57Z
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@piggo it would appear that the package is a full installer, but the installer will install updates (and the things you install from it) in the home directory.The desktop files in the home directory then have a higher priority than the system-wide store, so you get the locally-installed one the second time.
(DIR) Post #9ougMU5d3KQfHA7Xf6 by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2019-11-13T07:59:14Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@piggo which does raise the question: why is the installer in AUR; it's not very useful.(This is why I have the JetBrains tools installed via snap; they're automatically updated, they get delta-updates, they were already bundling everything, and so on)
(DIR) Post #9pNX7d6NYv32yyxD5k by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2019-11-27T06:18:34Z
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@kemonine errno 8 is ENOEXEC, which means that it's tried to execute something the kernel doesn't know how to execute.That's probably not particularly helpful, but that's what the error means; the build process has tried to execute something that's got the execute bit set, but is not executable (maybe for the wrong architecture, or a Windows PE executable without Wine installed, or a script without the shebang set?)
(DIR) Post #9pNXWjiS6m3EjejaSm by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2019-11-27T06:23:29Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@kemonine Development on ARM is somewhat of a crapshoot to begin with, and then cross-compilation is an extra kettle of too-old-fish and then node is… probably entirely uncaring about ARM.
(DIR) Post #9pOzFBpS7vuIabSJwu by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2019-11-27T22:44:53Z
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@piggo is that a truly immense rheostat on the right?
(DIR) Post #9pdY1bvrl16tAOgcRk by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2019-12-04T23:35:42Z
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@Mainebot: If you're planning on using GNOME the OSK should work fine; it does on my convertible laptop.GNOME is not a particularly touch-friendly system, though, so you might get frustrated if that's your only interaction method. It tries, but all the apps are designed for high-precision pointers.Also, I think you need a set of patches to the kernel in order for everything to work (found here: https://github.com/jakeday/linux-surface)
(DIR) Post #9rr9MNVOFBuGjrAvFQ by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-02-09T08:07:24Z
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@piggo In case this is not facetious: did you before? The transition arrangements are status quo (minus the obvious bits like MEPs and so on).
(DIR) Post #9rrQt65TisPjUkF6dE by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-02-09T10:41:47Z
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@piggo Yeah, and it's the sort of thing where “some guy on the internet was pretty sure I didn't need to do anything special” isn't going to cut it :wink:
(DIR) Post #9sSEEOrWSJeYLF6xQe by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-02-27T05:52:28Z
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Never try to document your APIs. You'll immediately discover edge cases which will make you reconsider the design of your APIs.
(DIR) Post #9tHbKGEQxORuHe4fuC by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-03-23T01:06:00Z
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@jwildeboer @grainloom Whether or not we get long term immunity is rather more up in the air, but it would be very unusual if short-term immunity didn't develop.
(DIR) Post #9tHfKyuRFMLKfIJxD6 by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-03-23T01:20:47Z
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@grainloom @jwildeboer I am by no means a virologist, but I strongly suspect the answer would be “yes”.I would also expect that further exposure to CORVID-19 would extend the short-term immunity.
(DIR) Post #9tIPVepEr1G7S8uwL2 by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-03-23T10:24:40Z
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@piggo I selected “other”; I've got an HP microserver (the venerable N54L).It's slowly accumulated jobs, though, and the potato CPU is starting to become a problem. I'd like to build something in a U-NAS box sometime.
(DIR) Post #9tIQOep8YtL9NJ60bg by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-03-23T10:38:27Z
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@jwildeboer @loke @grainloom Maybe? There's a value in the simplicity of a “all the cafes are shut, everyone stays home” rule.Once things are a bit more stable (and we've got lots more testing resources, so we can tell) it'll be an obvious win, though.
(DIR) Post #9tKXH89or79EqUwSX2 by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-03-23T01:18:51Z
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@grainloom xattr?Lots of limitations, but fairly usable, especially for metadata. A bunch of desktop systems use it.
(DIR) Post #9tzfkNhLFBEg8z1UDQ by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-04-13T07:12:55Z
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@pea Apart from anything else, what does he think craftsmen do?
(DIR) Post #9u5tgAovkFiDLxDhA0 by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-04-15T23:44:20Z
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@piggo It's been a number of years since I watched them, but… no, I don't recall them getting more long-term-story focused.It's a bit more like an old-fashioned sitcom; you get to see the characters in different situations, grow and evolve, but there's not an overall narrative.
(DIR) Post #9u63Y8genBZBxf9pw0 by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-04-16T09:16:50Z
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@piggo maybe you want wrapping_shr, (or maybe even Wrapping<u16>) to document that you expect it to overflow and silence the warning?
(DIR) Post #9uT1KODMegn2iWTiRk by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-04-27T11:03:39Z
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@piggo …! What is the 'a lifetime specifier doing there, inside the Box?!
(DIR) Post #9yhaIVyGGybxwz2ECW by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2020-03-17T01:10:44Z
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You know?The fact that hitting the <esc> key is both the way to get the GRUB menu to show and the way to (irreversibly) escape out of the GRUB menu into the utterly user-hostile GRUB command line is perhaps a bug I could file and/or fix.
(DIR) Post #A2wOcwhX5Ya9wTQGFU by RAOF@dev.glitch.social
2021-01-05T22:15:54Z
2 likes, 0 repeats
@piggo A bit of both, it seems? It looks like it's genuinely performance competitive, but also its performance-competitive in the restricted-power space rather than just being a magical unicorn processor that better across the board?