I believe it. Linux is not a good measure of efficiency (see kernel bypass tcp stacks, af_xdp, dpdk, spdk, etc). You can almost always make something more efficient/faster than Linux for a given task. The problem is doing that while having support for almost all hardware/configurations/uses cases under the sun.
Nothing but effort. Nobody wants to constantly baby a project just because someone else may change their code at a moment's notice. Why would you want to comb through someone else's html + obfuscated JavaScript to figure out how to grab some dynamically shown data when there was a well documented publicly available API?
Also NewPipe breaks all the time. APIs are generally stable, and can last years if not decades without changing at all. Meanwhile NewPipe parsing breaks every few weeks to months, requiring programmer intervention. Just check the project issue tracker and you'll see it's constantly being fixed to match YouTube changes.
Pros of working in an office:
- clear separation of work and home
- can easily ask coworkers next to you for a second opinion on things
Cons of working in an office:
- commute
- coworkers casually ask you for a second opinion on everything
"Have you considered there is something more to life than being very very very very, ridiculously good looking?"
"Like murder?"
Terry Goodkind.
Can't separate the work from the author since both are pretty bad.
It takes a special kind of person to require a pinned "please don't celebrate deaths" reminder on Reddit when you die...
Out of curiosity, what's preventing someone from making a regulatory db similar to tzdb other than the lack of maintainers?
This seems like the perfect use case for something like this: ship with a reasonable default, then load a specific profile after init to further tweak PM. If regulations change you can just update a package instead of having to update the entire kernel.
Land's cursed. Almost as if America was built on top of an ancient Native American burial ground or something.
Well my fridge is an essential device and it's cool.
But probably not cool with teenagers though...
Yep it's Intel.
They said it up until their competitor started offering more than 4 cores as a standard.
It's based on a book by Sir Terry Pratchett (GNU Terry Pratchett, you shall be missed) and Neil Gaiman. If you know Pratchett then you know it's mostly going to be an absurdist comedy.
Other works I recommend from Pratchett are Going Postal, Equal Rites, and Guards! Guards!
True story:
*Grabs Cat2 cable out of lab storage and hooks everything up to it*
"Why is everything so slow?"
Nope. Plenty of people want this.
In the last few years I've seen plenty of cases where CS undergrad students get stumped if ChatGPT is unable to debug/explain a question to them. I've literally heard "idk because ChatGPT can't explain this lisp code" as an excuse during office hours.
Before LLMs, there were also a significant amount of people who used GitHub issues/discord to ask simple application usage questions instead of Googling. There seems to be a significant decrease of people's willingness to search for an answer regardless of AI tools existing.
I wonder if it has to do with weaker reading comprehension skills?