I don’t think anybody is obsessed with it. It’s a problematic behavior in many men, enough so that it’s become a meme, particularly in the US.
likes: food, programming, traveling, physics
I don’t think anybody is obsessed with it. It’s a problematic behavior in many men, enough so that it’s become a meme, particularly in the US.
What helped me understand QM was spending four years getting a degree in physics then never using it again.
⚠️ The link above might be offensive. I’ve deleted the post but the deletion is failing to sync across instances or something (I’m still receiving reports for it after it’s been deleted)
Yeah in the fall, it’s the only dying-looking tree in an evergreen forest
Tbh least favorite conifer. Not even evergreen
I was running out of RAM on my 16GB system for years (just doing normal work tasks), so I finally upgraded to a new laptop with 64GB of RAM. Now I never run out of memory.
I’m not sure off-hand since I’m not too familiar with VLC.
I would imagine it could be an issue in a graphics driver at the kernel (amdgpu?) or user level (mesa?). It could also be a problem in something higher up.
I would recommend posting an issue in the VLC repo and see if you can get better support that way.
Can you turn off hardware decoding and see if it works then?
Learned how drivers worked and fixed a driver for an USB to I2C chip. It’s still buggy but at least it sorta works now.
Some more details: I was using a CH347 (USB to UART/SPI/I2C) and there was an open source driver that used a previous chip version. The original dev had hardcoded the bulk IO endpoints indices. The only change I had to do was just iterate over the endpoints and search for the correct ones. But at first, I didn’t understand anything about how the USB subsystem worked and how drivers were loaded. All I could tell was the USB device was correctly detected but the I2C driver wasn’t being loaded, despite proper udev rules, correct vendor/product IDs, etc.
Maybe there’s something that I’m still missing, but the genders could be any which way and it would still give the same meaning: fucking or screwing someone over. It’s vulgar and tasteless but I don’t think it is necessarily homophobic or misogynistic.
It does simply imply someone is being (sexually) dominated by another, but there’s no placement of “good” or “bad”—just that Microsoft users are being dominated by Microsoft, which is roughly true. I do think it’s a crude analogy and a terrible meme, but to say it’s anything more seems like a stretch.
Most of the embedded world uses those.
These would be great for backups if they’re cheap enough.
Somebody correct me if I’m wrong, but I don’t think Yuzu has any proprietary code. Folks have to go to other websites to download the Switch firmware and keys needed to play games.
⚠️ Warning:
There may be an offensive/gross picture posted in this thread. It was deleted from the thread a while ago but I’m still receiving reports for it. Your instance might not be correctly syncing deletions with the LW instance if you’re still seeing the comment. Sorry in advance if you see it.
People put carrots in pizza sauce, like Rao’s: https://www.raos.com/products/pizza-sauce
And roasted tomatoes are great with some peppers and onions.
Tbh I never understood this rule very well and I did my undergrad in physics. My teacher or prof would teach this but I’d forget it almost instantly.
To visualize a cross product, I just remember that x cross y = z, then remember how the axes are oriented.
I don’t think it’s necessarily a celebration of abuse. I agree that he’s obviously way out of line sending this email.
I think Linus is (was) a complete asshole who lacks interpersonal skills, and this email exemplifies his character. To me, this post shows the mentality of some developers (and leadership) in FOSS and why some folks find it difficult to contribute to open-source software. This post opens up the discussion on that.
FWIW, I’ve received zero reports on this post itself. But I’ve received reports on abusive comments in this post, which I’ve promptly removed. This community is more/less self-moderating and if the post receives a significant positive vote ratio, I don’t think it should be removed by me. It brings an important discussion to the table regarding acceptable behavior in software development.
What are you talking about? I’ve witnessed it several times now at work, especially regarding programming or EE. Have you not yet suffered through a programmer condescendingly explain trivial matters to others, especially to women?
The post is obviously a hyperbole but it’s not too far off from reality.