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  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 3d ago 100%

    A 5 bit long signed integer? What kind of weird system you using ? :p

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  • Why are people impressed with SpaceX?
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 3d ago 100%

    As a software developer i know what iterative development means, its in our blood and brains ( or at least it should be ). Simulations can indeed only get you so far, and i agree sometimes you have to make things and take a plunge. However, and i would like to be really wrong here so correct me if im wrong, but other companies like nasa, do not just shoot shit up in space and hope for the best. They arent allowed to do so for a reason. They test and calculate everything very rigoursly to make sure itll hold up as expected. From thruster power, resistance to continues extreme heat from reentry, ...
    All of that they do here, on earth, before shooting anything up into space. Otherwise things like the rover on mars would have needed like 20 tries instead of 2.

    These are things that looks like spacex is just throwing out the window.
    To take it back to software development, they are doing an iterative development ( which is very good for what they are doing! ) but their testing before production/release of software is so basic theyll just see how it responds out there. Thats a huge nono to me if youre going to end up crashing all those rockets in the sea killing a shit ton of nature in the process. Sometimes the means dont justify the costs to me, and this is one of them. Yes, the booster catching was nice to see ( eventhough it nearly ended badly ) and its idea is very good and needed, but the way to get there is...messy.

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  • Windows 10 only has a year of support: 12 months left to keep Copilot off your desktop or learn Linux
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 4d ago 100%

    Depends, im a power user that does all kind of things on my pc. Gaming but also other workloads, so ill be dual booting with linux as my main soon anyway.
    But for pure gaming, ye linux might do depending on the games

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  • Badgers
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 5d ago 100%

    Ye, they are apparently a different race of badgers!
    Source : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Badger

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  • Windows 10 only has a year of support: 12 months left to keep Copilot off your desktop or learn Linux
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 5d ago 100%

    Its almost always tools and programs used in their professional life. The 365 suite, adobe suite, fusion 360, simulation programs, ...

    Yes i know there are free or alternative options, but they are never as good or powerful as the full on suites that have existed since the dawn of time.

    Ive been running linux ( dual boot with windows ) on my work laptop for 9 months at this point and i love it. But sometimes, i do have to boot windows for one of the professional suite programs.

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  • Badgers
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 5d ago 100%

    I love this meme, and nearly commented it myself to the top comment, but i learned an american badger != a honey badger :(

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  • Why are people impressed with SpaceX?
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 5d ago 100%

    Specially this. How space x handles failures is a very hard nono in my book. "But we test in the field" is what space x says, and as a software developer its like saying "we test in production".
    Yes youll get something use able faster, but its way way more costly in the long run and is nasty in between.
    My arse they cant test this stuff on earth. We have simulations, models, calculations, test, everything. Yes, things can and will sometimes still fail when going in production ( in flight ) but you want to lower the risk of it failing cause its costly as fuck.

    They dont seem to care though.

    Also, im not saying what they are building towards is bad, it really really isnt, but their methods is... Bad

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  • Tim Walz calls for scrapping of electoral college to decide US presidential race
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 2w ago 81%

    It makes sense to exist... In the 40's.
    But with modern day society and how small the world has become, it makes no sense to me to still exist tbh..

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  • At 12 she was abused by a friend’s father. Police told her parents she was asleep so there was no need to let her know. The problem? They were wrong …
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 2w ago 46%

    Not all cops, and not everywhere in the world, are pigs. The world isn't that black and white

    -1
  • PayPal implements default data sharing with third parties: users must manually opt out
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 2w ago 100%

    Ye, i dont know how it is worldwide but here in west europe paying online with your bank is just like paying with paypal. The only advantages paypal has over my bank is its return policy and it technically not directly linking the purchase with my personal info.
    I havent used paypal in a while tbh...

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  • PayPal implements default data sharing with third parties: users must manually opt out
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 2w ago 83%

    Thanks, i was thinking id need to go check them later today and that it was kinda illegal. Now i can be rest assured its fiiine

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  • How Germany outfitted half a million balconies with solar panels
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 3w ago 100%

    Ah ye that makes sense! The grid is pushing 230v in, so to get power out you push harder back, so for example 240v. Thanks!
    I know inverters have a safety feature to shutdown if the input voltage is not in range so it doesnt push power on a open net etc. Have had people tell me that inverters doing that was a problem, but discovered they shutdown if the input isnt right!

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  • How Germany outfitted half a million balconies with solar panels
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 3w ago 100%

    but it outputs 230v, how would that ever get to 250v? keep in mind, im not an electronics engineer just guessing with what i know

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  • How Germany outfitted half a million balconies with solar panels
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 3w ago 100%

    thanks for those very interesting points. its great to know those.
    i do believe the point of the power grid is changing, and its point is changing. and yes, many people dont like it because they have to pay more despite having solar panels, but somebody has to pay for the maintenance on the power grid and paying those people costs money, lots of it.

    i didnt think about the startup time of power plants, but how do they do that now? i cant imagine them being able to do these operations now, or do they really predict power usage constantly? also, i assume the 250v is because putting load on the grid would lower the 250v to the normal 230v, and because people use their solar power that load is reduced so its voltage is too high?

    That said, i do believe its regulated too much. It has issues, yes, but regulating isnt making the issues go away...

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  • How Germany outfitted half a million balconies with solar panels
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 3w ago 100%

    typical hehe
    governments are often more strict in rules than normal people, and those rules often prevent other rules from being enforced hehe
    it shouldnt be though, they should set the bar with their own buildings :)

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  • How Germany outfitted half a million balconies with solar panels
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 3w ago 100%

    I agree. I often discuss this with friends and the argument of "our electricity network cant supply all that power" (which is true) is one i often counter with adding more solar panels, even to apartments.

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  • How Germany outfitted half a million balconies with solar panels
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 3w ago 100%

    My brother, who lives in germany, has told me about this before and i love the idea so much. Its so simple to implement and has no downsides whatsoever. The person renting the appartment buys the solar panel and if they leave they can easily take it with them.

    And yet, i can not for the life of me get my land lord convinced to allow me to do this too despite it needing no permanent changes to the apartment... Solar panels rules are too strict here too, and i love that germany just embraced them like its nothing

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  • It's official, Rust is an anti C/C++ elitist slur
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 3w ago 100%

    I think you have things wrong. Any other languages can have libraries be distributed as some format that would allow applications to use it, be it linux/gcc and .a files ( which are actually archives with elf/object files of the code ), or a full on library like .so/.dll.
    Rust can only do .o/.dll and only have it expose like a c library afaik. Even .net has improved on the .dll and includes all its language features in it. Rust has none of that. Its not true that libraries not rebuilding are only for closed source. Its also ease of use/access and less problem prone. What if i build my library using a different version of the compiler than you and your application? I could have no problems building my library, while you cant build your application because the library i made gets rebuild and errors.
    These errors happen and are all because there is no stable interface/abi and all other languages have overcome this.

    Also, by default, nothing in c is rebuild unless it needs to. Thats why the intermediate .o ( elf object ) files exist, so it only has to do the relinking and not recompile and thats why .a archive/libraries in c work, because it doesnt recompile. Unless you meant the fact rust can rebuild part of a file, without recompiling it completely?

    I think you dont fully understand how c compilers ( gcc specifically ) work when using multi file projects ( and not just doing gcc input.c -o output.exe ) just how i dont fully know how the rust compiler works. Also, anything using IL will always have an abi, because how else will it jump from code to IL code, so its obvious that rust to wasm will have to abide by that haha. Be it c wasm, c# wasm or rust wasm calling one another. Wasm is wasm, and you only need an exposed interface to call or include the other wasm ( c#/blazor having NativeFileReference in the csproj )

    Again, i like the idea of rust, but it has a long way to go to be viable atm. And it has many pitfalls to avoid so it doesnt become the hot mess that is any framework based on node.js

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  • It's official, Rust is an anti C/C++ elitist slur
  • DacoTaco DacoTaco 4w ago 100%

    I know that exists, but whats the point of that? You loose all advantages of rust when you use the library then because it cant predict application state with the library code. There is a reason all those rust libraries are compiled locally when you compile a rust application. Its a major lacking point for rust, and as long as it lacks that its dead in the water for big projects.
    Again, i like strong type stuff and i like the ideas of rust but it is not grown up enough for me

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  • So, i was a liftoff user because the app was the app that looked the most like rif when i migrated away from reddit in july last year, but hasnt had updates since. With the lemmy.world update from a few hours ago its officially dead though which makes me sad as the others arent like it all. ANYWAY, now using voyager and trying to make it look to my tastes. So far so good, but seem to be missing user profile pictures/icons and some general flair/info i used to see in liftoff. Is this a missing feature in voyager? Do i enable it somewhere?

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    www.ifixit.com

    While they were happy with what the fairphone 4 brought to the table, they seem to like what was changed for the fairphone 5. What are you guys' opinions on this? A welcome change? would you get one if your phone died within the next year?

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