A few years ago I ported some legacy device firmware from its ancient Sun-based development environment to gcc (68k cross-compiler) and Linux. Most of the code compiled reasonably as-is. Some of it required a bit of hand-holding, like telling gcc that I really did need to store four characters one at a time rather than a single long when talking to a dual-port RAM interface.
Some of the low-level OS code did in fact require assembly. So be it.
...laura
I accept that no matter what I do at airport security it will be wrong. This is, according to some sources, by design. Keeps the bad guys on their toes. Something like that.
As a Canadian the only biometric ID I have is my passport. Despite the pressure to do so, I do not use it for domestic flights. International flights only. For U.S. domestic flights I use my drivers license. For Canadian domestic flights, my pilots license.
...laura
maladroit: "Covid vaccinations saved lives and reduced the severity of cases."
Mirnotoriety: "Vaccination didn't prevent you getting Covid."
maladroit: "And now you're just lying."
If "Vaccination didn't prevent you getting Covid" is a lie, then vaccination prevented COVID in all cases. However, your first statement was "Covid vaccinations
My experience with KDE has been that some changes irreversibly break existing behavior. Window toolbars disappear along with the mechanism to restore them. A second desktop task manager appears with no mechanism to move it or remove it.
I may be mistaken, but it appears that KDE has an update mechanism independent from Fedora's dnf, and I've found no way to disable it.
The official documentation is inadequate and seldom applies to the version I'm using. I often have to go to reddit to find cures, although as expected they work less than half the time.
Have any of these people ever been to England?
...laura
The gym where I work out has Sirius XM as their background music, variously Hits 1 or The Pulse. If you told me it was all pre-recorded loops and/or AI I wouldn't doubt it.
The gym's soundtrack has nevertheless introduced me to some neat new music, duly added to my workout playlist. In that sense it's served its purpose. It's also exposed me to some truly dire excuses for music. People buy this garbage?!
The radio-friendly versions of songs are sometimes inadvertently amusing. "My give a craps are on vacation" "I'm a real tough kid I can hannnndle it"
...laura
Hubble has provided a spectacular return on its investment, both in science results and in PR (i.e. pretty pictures).
Is it worth additional refurbishing? Is it worth bringing back to Earth? Both decisions are way above my paygrade. In many ways JWST is "better", but will it capture the public's imagination the way Hubble did? I doubt it.
...laura
Apart from the brain, that doesn't grow new cells.
That is an old claim that has been shown to be untrue. Search for "brain cell growth" and look at some of the results.
There is not enough work for everyone to earn money.
Prove it or provide a credible source. Just stringing words together is not a dependable way to generate truth.
You could overcome this problem with some kind communism
Communism assigns work, goods and services at bureaucratic whim, and by thus removing any mechanism connecting supply and demand, guarantees misallocation of effort and resources. Absent communism, a person needing food could take the most direct path by doing work to grow or gather food. Money does not even need to enter the equation.
One good reason why computers can do more work than people is that they never have to stop and answer the phone.