Content warning: Rust question
Moravian Kaleidoscopy Ltd🇺🇦 likes this.
reshared this
reshared this
More musings on #Rust:
I wonder if it would be possible to write an #SNES #ROM in Rust. It seems like exactly the kind of resource-constrained system that would be a prime candidate for that sort of thing. Unfortunately, it seems that the SNES used a custom processor, so it's very possible that I won't be able to specify it as a compile target. A quick search reveals that many people have made SNES emulators in Rust, but at a glace, I see nothing about writing ROMS.
I believe the original NES used an off-the-shelf processor (6502 if memory serves?). Perhaps that's more likely to be supported, but that may be a little too resource constrained.
I shall have to dig deeper into this idea. I love the idea of building a custom ROM rather than just pirating something off the internet.
Has anyone done anything like this? Links to any relevant resources would be very much appreciated.
like this
Programming Feed reshared this.
like this
The SNES CPU is based on the WDC 65C816, which is indeed able to run 6502 code but it also has 16-bit mode instructions with much larger memory address space.
I think the only general purpose computer to use this CPU was the Apple IIGS, so maybe look around to see if there's any Rust port to Apple IIGS.
this folks have ported llvm to MOS6502: https://llvm-mos.org/wiki/Welcome
You can try to link rustc to that fork and add a new rustc target.
It will be a very long journey, but it is possible.
reshared this
Newbie #Rust question time:
I wan to use the current_local_offset function from the time
library, but I apparently need to import it into my project with the local-offset
feature.
I assume I need to specify this in Cargo.toml
but for the life of me, I can't figure out how. Can someone point me in the right direction?
like this
reshared this
Have you tried something like the following?
time = { version = "0.3.36", features = ["local-offset"] }
Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
reshared this
Nevermind abandoned software and hardware, I'm of the view that purchasing software or hardware should include the tools necessary to control every bit of data in every RAM and register and the documentation necessary to do so.
I understand that it's much easier to make the abandonware argument though, and I also support that. It'd be a nice compromise if companies had to submit documentation and programming tools to some kind of agency that timed the public release for a few years after the launch date. That way, millions of products wouldn't become e-waste if a company is suddenly bought out or goes bankrupt.
Story time:
I've been holed up in the (home) office for most of the day (not uncommon). I happened to look out the window and noticed that our building was surrounded by cops.
Interesting.
Turns out they arrested one of the downstairs neighbours... for what, I don't know.
Here's the interesting bit though: apparently, the landlord offered them the key to the apartment, but they couldn't legally use it because there was no warrant. I guess that makes sense, but while they weren't allowed to to that, they apparently were allowed to enter the apartment by prying a window open or kicking the door in. In what world does that make any sense?
like this
reshared this
reshared this
Gab AI | An Uncensored and Unbiased AI Platform
Gab AI | An Uncensored and Unbiased AI Platform | Gab AI is an uncensored and unbiased AI platform that accelerates your mind. Access a vast array of knowledge, explore dozens of unique AI characters, and increase your productivity.Gab AI
like this
Kevin Russell reshared this.
People who don't like #Rust: why specifically don't you like it?
I'm in the process of learning it now. There are definitely some things about the language that I can see some as finding irritating (i.e.: the borrowing system). Personally though, I'd rather have a dozen complie-time errors than a single runtime error. This is the reason I tend to gravitate towards Haskell, for instance.
It's certainly not the right language for everything, but if you want better safety in code that needs to be highly efficient, it seems a reasonable alternative to C/C++.
like this
reshared this
the borrow checker is such a big part of the language it's not just slightly irritating, it's like having a non-consentual finger up the ass every time you open some Rust code in your editor
And the fact Rust is always staticallly linked and lacks any sort of reproducible builds don't help, even the compiler itself only compiles with an n-2 version of the compiler, if you skip updating the compiler for a while and want or have to keep using sources then have fun compiling every version since you last updated the compiler
Its type system is also like a borrow checker: non-consentual fist up the ass, want to add an u8 to an u32? Nope, can't, have to manually cast everything because that's why we do programming languages instead of writing Assembly, to do all the fucking busy work ourselves
Oh, and Cargo is its own can of rotten worms
LisPi likes this.
@Reiddragon > And the fact Rust is always staticallly linked and lacks any sort of reproducible builds don't help
That is excusable in languages where source-only distribution is normal and expected. (Indeed, compilation should be a transparent caching step and artifacts of such shouldn't be commonly shared.)
That is not the case for Rust.
> even the compiler itself only compiles with an n-2 version of the compiler
That's also a problem, Rust's bootstrap story sucks.
Ada's might suck as much, I'm not sure, I have found a few interpreters when I last looked...
> I'd rather have a dozen complie-time errors than a single runtime error. This is the reason I tend to gravitate towards Haskell, for instance.
There should be no meaningful difference between runtime and dev-time for the majority of devs. Dead languages aren't necessary. And punchcard retrocompatibility can be preserved without prioritizing a development process that is optimized for that workflow.
As for typing static vs dynamic, there's a thing called "gradual typing", and it is very possible to tie the type-checker into a REPL.
I've got a few things with Rust that make me dislike it a bit -- note that that doesn't mean that I think it's generally a bad language. (They're all good langs, Brent.) But here we go:
Another single implementation standard-less language. No solid standard library, everything done by downloading the internet. Very un-Turbo-Pascal-ish compile times and memory usage. Annotations. BCPL-ish syntax with too much line noise (and hey, I used to program Perl). Tied a lot to the worst things in IT (browser engines, crypto). Fanatical community. Overly complex async to save me from writing threads. Both functional purists and micro-optimizers. The word "Rustaceans" alone.
It's not a language that I'd like to use recreationally, but I wouldn't quit jobs if I have to do more work with it at work.
Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
The rising value of goods and services per worker meant rising pay. But that relationship ended in the 1970s
The Great Regression: 1980-Now
Chart shows 80% productivity rise matched by 8% average hourly compensation and 7% average hourly wage increases. (2/2)
@aral
Chais pas "où" on a merdé mais le "quand" est assez visible.
Ironie de l'histoire, cela correspond à la prise de pouvoir des socalistes en France - si tant est que ce graphique s'y applique.
p/s. Et avant qu'on ne me saute sur le râble, je rappelle que le MATIF, un des marchés financiers les plus spéculatifs au monde à l'époque, est une invention d'un ministre socialiste si je ne m'abuse.
Vieux Mâle Blanc (au phycihaile) likes this.
Dear OpenBoard,
I have you set to English (UK) for a reason (because English (CA) isn't an option). Quit trying to autocorrect "colour" to "color".
Thanks.
juliadream likes this.
@Reiddragon @me
@Reiddragon
DJ UNK and I basically have a show that's just about what @me does.
BREAKING
GREEN TEA ADDED TO MENU AT PARADISE SUSHI
so according to classic Bell labs at worst jlamothe is a minor success ;p
𝚛𝚊𝚝 likes this.
Diving into the #Veilid documentation... or what I can find of it.
I have an idea that may well turn out to be vapourware, but my brain won't let me drop it if I don't at least try to build it.
I've been itching to do something with Veilid since @The Gibson first announced it.
like this
reshared this
I honestly didn't think veilid managed to get anywhere, which was sad.
VeilidChat exists but I think that's the only productive/useful project.
Development on the repos has really slowed down post-announcement, which isn't inherently a bad thing, if it's "done", but I don't think it's done - instead it feels stalled.
Maybe it all moved on-network and to places I can't see? That'd be cool.
"This turns #AI-"assisted" coders into reverse centaurs. The AI can churn out code at superhuman speed, and you, the human in the loop, must maintain perfect vigilance and attention"
https://pluralistic.net/2024/04/01/human-in-the-loop/
@pluralistic once again writes words that get stuck in my brain.
reshared this
This is the part where I gloat about being right about Bluesky, right?
They never really wanted federation.
like this
reshared this
The Gibson likes this.
@Shreyan Jain I'll admit to not having heard of this. If I post something using this third-party AppView, who controls the physical disk on which my post resides?
I haven't paid a ton of attention to BlueSky because I'm simply not interested in yet another walled garden.
Slow Response on RSS
!Friendica Support
I'm having some trouble subscribing to a new RSS feed from Friendica.
The URL is https://www.cbc.ca/webfeed/rss/rss-topstories
I run Friendica behind an nginx reverse proxy, and it's giving me a gateway timeout error.
I know that the whole reverse proxy thing isn't specifically a Friendica thing and I'm working on figuring out how to increase the timeout, but the fact that the response is taking long enough to trigger it is.
like this
Amazon squeezed sellers and jacked up prices.
Google stamped out competitors in search.
Facebook used buy-or-bury schemes to crush competition.
Apple used its immense power to kill off challengers.
All four face major antitrust cases from the US government.
It's about time.
reshared this
like this
Dear spammers:
If you're going to create fake accounts, maybe don't choose a profile photo with an iStock watermark...
Light🐧 likes this.
#capitalism
#anticapitalism #capitalist #socialism #anarchism #leftism #leftism #fuckcapitalism #anarchyrules #anarchy
reshared this
One day, there was a family riding next to me in a bus. The mother chastised her kids for smartphone habits: "it's been only a week since the beginning of the billing period, and you've spent 3GB of traffic already!"
I wanted to apologise to her and to her children on behalf of all the BigTech and modern IT industry so badly.
I also felt immensely sad for the internet reality we live in. Twenty years ago I would spend my allowance on buying a 5MB dial-up access card, and that would be enough for a day of happy browsing, or a few days of ICQ. Nowadays, I wouldn't be able to even load Discord browser app with that much of traffic.
reshared this
Harry Sintonen (@harrysintonen@infosec.exchange)
Probably the single most impressive entry from the #Revision2024 #demoparty : Remnants by Alcatraz Here's the whole intro executable for your convenience: 68f69f07b013cd10d6bac90391eee2f9bbf601b8cdccf7e7720e41f6c13f7508804702058047082d80ee4c608d28b…Infosec Exchange
Clearing Reports
!Friendica Support
So, I reported one of my own posts using an alt account to test how it worked. I'm very glad that this feature now exists, but I have two questions:
- Is it possible to receive some sort of notification when a report is filed?
- How can I mark a report as resolved, or otherwise clear it?
Edit: proofreading is for suckers
reshared this
@SteveBellovin Today you posted a note about how someone appears to have injected a Trojan into the source of XV. (Oops, I mean xz.) And there was another post about the increase in complex tool chains and dependencies that are larding-up the software many of us use.
That made me wonder about whether national security bodies - intelligence, military, or other - or social movements, e.g. ISI) might be injecting similar things into source trees.
It would be relatively easy to hide such things, particularly via the tool chains or Makefiles - like who is going to notice a sed script in a autoconfig part of a build chain?
Like good spies, such things could be planted years in advance and only triggered, if ever, when desired.
This is not an open source issue, it is a ubiquitous issue. And in light of Ken Thompson's "Reflections on Trust" some of these could be quite invisible in some kinds of source code.
I am very nervous about the vulnerability and brittleness of our new world of tech as a utility.
reshared this
@me Yse, open source allows inspection (and testing). When we were doing an open reference design/implementation for California for voting systems we slightly changed things to encourage testing *and* to openly publish test results. (But we also closed the door a bit on viral redistribution to throw a bone to encourage private implementations of our reference software/hardware/procedures with proprietary, i.e. you-pay-for, enhancements.)
However, I've been wrestling with tool chains for several years and it seems to me that those are good places to hide "bad things" without anyone looking very hard to find them.
reshared this
Totally agree with this. I lived though Hurricane Harvey and it actually restored some of my faith in humanity..
But I might add that there were gangs running around killing folks after Katrina.
Gangs of cops.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danziger_Bridge_shootings
reshared this
@Lizette603_23 I tend to think any named group of people — companies, bands, countries, etc — can be singular or plural depending which makes most sense. Grammatical number doesn't always correspond to actual counting
also nasa is an enby
@Lizette603_23
Collective nouns in British English are usually treated as plural, while they are usually treated as singular in American English.
https://editorsmanual.com/articles/collective-nouns-singular-or-plural/
“Team Is” or “Are”: Are Collective Nouns Singular or Plural? | The Editor’s Manual
Collective nouns, which refers to groups like “team,” “government,” “family,” and “committee,” are treated as singular in American but plural in British English.Neha Karve (The Editor’s Manual)
@Lizette603_23 British English differs from common American usage. In the US, people commonly use the singular form for companies, in England the plural form is preferred.
NASA is ...
UK Space are...
Neither is more correct than the other, just local variation.
Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
reshared this
The unit doesn't make the whole and the whole doesn't represent every unit.
We may look similar, can reproduce between us but ultimately everyone taking is one decision to either poison children air or burn money for a ball full of rust
"Hey, what's a good name for our company that makes switches?"
"ANU?"
"Yeah, sounds good! Let's buy the domain for our website!"
reshared this
Jonathan Lamothe likes this.
Parens in Tags
In future versions of Friendica, is it possible to not include parens (specifically close parens) in tags the same way you can't use other punctuation? (so that this doesn't #happen)
@Jonathan Lamothe @Hypolite Petovan so what actually would be needed is the regex to exclude all the unwanted characters, like parenthesis or no width space and then whenever we find some character that should terminate a tag we can add it to the regex.
@Hypolite Petovan out of interest, do you know where this is done in the code?
- https://github.com/friendica/friendica/blob/9fe0d724613f84baa1de662ce457c60981ab4504/src/Content/Text/BBCode.php#L2296
- https://github.com/friendica/friendica/blob/9fe0d724613f84baa1de662ce457c60981ab4504/src/Content/Text/BBCode.php#L2326
@Jonathan Lamothe
Devon Morris
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Content warning: Rust question
I bet it has something to do with https://docs.rs/time/0.3.36/src/time/sys/local_offset_at/unix.rs.html#144
Is your `main.rs` single-threaded?
unix.rs - source
docs.rsJonathan Lamothe
in reply to Devon Morris • •Content warning: Rust question
Mo :ferris: :tux:
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Jacob Pratt
in reply to Mo :ferris: :tux: • • •