Posts by roobre@niu.moe
 (DIR) Post #9qWMmRkLi1Bn6Manb6 by roobre@niu.moe
       2019-12-31T10:27:31Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @lain I never thought I'd see you posting spanish memes mplp
       
 (DIR) Post #9qaeo8W0kz5pqLgISm by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-01-02T11:59:26Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       IKEA should really sell Kallax-compatible PC cases.
       
 (DIR) Post #9rKDjT3ursuE9WZoau by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-01-24T11:15:39Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       Does anyone have any experience with ErgoDox / ErgoDone keyboards and QMK firmware? I'm very tempted to try this https://t.co/gZPrSVFxvv
       
 (DIR) Post #9rOUOjAUGbzPsOBaka by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-01-26T13:00:09Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       A bit disappointed to see that Nebula's NAT traversal approach is incredibly naïve, to the point of being useless unless you have control over your network and firewall.
       
 (DIR) Post #9rOUOjQRJIkYfreKcC by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-01-26T13:00:55Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       Honestly I was all hyped up thinking of a functional OpenVPN replacement easier to configure and deploy, but it looks like we're not there yet.
       
 (DIR) Post #9rP8hSuSw57D7WBKLI by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-01-26T20:39:00Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @newt It's tempting (the EZ or any chinese clone), but damn, it's hella expensive. I was thinking on something under 150€ or so.
       
 (DIR) Post #9rpwDgbqLwzOovl6u0 by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-02-08T18:00:25Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       Does anyone know a tool that allows to browse a list of files (like the output of `find` or `tar -t`) interactively? Like, allowing to collapse folders, for example, or something like what `ncdu` does.
       
 (DIR) Post #9rrFHj4zCht1vVzRC4 by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-02-09T10:04:48Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @noriko Yes, but a file manager that operates just on a file list instead of the filesystem.
       
 (DIR) Post #9rrFMlOxztFoZpjnea by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-02-09T10:05:43Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @p_ Because the tar file is huge and I don't want to uncompress it, just check its contents comfortably
       
 (DIR) Post #9rrGIYNQa5ykydZfCS by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-02-09T10:16:10Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @p_ You need to uncompress it, but not to extract it. See tar -t. Basically reads everything and discards all but filenames, which are printed to stdout. Since you don't write anyhting to disk is orders of magnitude faster than extracting and browsing (and requires no free space).
       
 (DIR) Post #9uIYv0mHunA2UbKC5g by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-04-22T10:05:38Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       Thinking about writing a small program that connects to an email (IMAP) server, drives down into a folder (e.g. "SPAM"), parses List-Unsuscribe headers and submits the action for every email present on it.Does this already exist?Should be like a local version of unroll dot me
       
 (DIR) Post #9vDMgkVJcYcmJie9BI by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-05-19T19:40:57Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @ultem These look nice, is there a way to get encrypted communications with them?
       
 (DIR) Post #9xAecEbrr9sDWxLkGW by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-07-17T08:08:34Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @tuxcrafting Been there, done that.
       
 (DIR) Post #9xAhpf3h8CbZBfSYC0 by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-07-17T08:43:13Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       How hard would it be to train some NN model to recognize those procedurally-generated chinese brand names?it is so blatantly easy for humans that there must be a way to automate it.
       
 (DIR) Post #9xIzlV1hqD0VM2NFI0 by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-07-21T08:43:18Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @tuxcrafting What's the use case for that? GPRs are usually indistinguishable
       
 (DIR) Post #9xJ055hrgq4GcLR3Y0 by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-07-21T08:46:51Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @tuxcrafting But then those registers would not be safe for the compiler to freely assign to variables, right?
       
 (DIR) Post #9xJ0HLOfBCHqksIS8G by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-07-21T08:49:04Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @tuxcrafting What I mean is that (I think) you don't choose where inputs are placed because it's where the compiler put the variable you are referencing. Or I least I think that is the rationale.
       
 (DIR) Post #9xJ0iEyn9Agkff1LNo by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-07-21T08:53:55Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @tuxcrafting I have the feeling that gcc has inline asm a bit abandoned… I've been working with it for a couple years and I have encountered several stupid bugs, such as register reusing where it shouldn't, using reserved registers for inputs…This was in older gcc versions (4.9), but the feature itself does not really seem to be well polished.In any case, MOVing manually is not that bad, could be way worse :)
       
 (DIR) Post #9xZVIfi6gxtX4DBqxk by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-07-29T07:52:03Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @tuxcrafting We've been essentially on a permanent economic recession since then
       
 (DIR) Post #9xdgV4UOKcEIaX2nc8 by roobre@niu.moe
       2020-07-31T08:15:13Z
       
       1 likes, 0 repeats
       
       @natalie It will never cease to amaze me how shitty knock-off clones can be. They always cut corners in the most surprising ways, ones that no sane person would think about.