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Totally serious - originally I created a c64 emulator, and then moved on an turned it into a 'dream' computer...
It took me about 4 years - on/off... Now I'm at the point to cleaning it up and releasing to pulic domain...
At the end I was thinking to actually create it using FPGA...
A few more years probably...
“Real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time.”
― Terry Pratchett, Hogfather
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The curse of Patch Tuesday strikes again as error codes wreak minor havoc I may sound like a broken record posting these, but I'm not the one breaking Windows
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Luckily, it can transmit that data back to Earth far faster than Hubble. And where can I order one of those SSDs?
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Kent Sharkey wrote: And where can I order one of those SSDs?
Quote: So the SSD, like all other parts, must be radiation hardened and survive a grueling certification process.
Quote: Two high-profile stories in US newspapers this year have prompted the media to ask whether the illegal sale of human organs in the US is more common than previously thought. In the first case, a New York City resident was arrested for trying to orchestrate the sale of a human kidney to an undercover FBI agent for US$160,000. The second story was of an Israeli man who flew to New York to donate his kidney in exchange for $20,000. Unless you have a secret life in the 1% you aren't telling us about, you will never never be able to afford it.
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I did not see costs...
Quote: When the telescope was named Webb in 2002, it had a budget forecast of $1 billion to $3.5 billion for launch as early as 2010. When 2010 arrived, the launch date had moved to 2014, and estimated costs for the telescope had risen to $5.1 billion. After reviews found both the budget and the schedule to be unrealistic, in 2011, NASA reset the program with a much higher budget not to exceed $8 billion and an October 2018 launch date. https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/11/science/greg-robinson-webb-telescope-nasa.html
Obviously, it didn't make 2018. I don't think you, Kent, or I can afford that SSD.
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Microsoft is launching a new rendition of its autonomous aircraft simulation technology, 'Project AirSim,' starting with a limited preview. Does it connect to Flight Simulator?
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In this post, I’m going to share what I learned from a people, process, product perspective. That they don't use it?
JD was one of the most amazing people I had the joy of encountering when I worked at the Fish Shoppe.
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Deepfakes are getting better at mimicking real people. Soon that's going to be a problem for everyone. If you outlaw deepfakes, only fakes will be deep
Present company included.
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Will they be able to solve captchas?
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You think we could outsource them?
TTFN - Kent
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Uh oh, I've been found out. I guess a 20 year career as a "developer/programmer" or whatever it is people on this site do wasn't all bad. Anytime you can get companies to pay you for pretending to be something that long is living the dream. As far as I'm concerned C# is a musical note, java is coffee, rust is whats eating away at my car, and python? well thats just snake oil.
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Developers need to be cautious about whom they trust on GitHub because it's easy to establish fake credibility on the platform, security vendor warns. By getting them to use GitHub?
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Excellent. I'm a champion of "roll your own".
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This. And every external component that goes in production must be vetted, and it also has to be included in the software tree - no automatic updates with every build.
Then I am now working in the same field as The Codewitch so it's not as I'll ever have the issue of over-abundance of GitHub resources. I already have to bribe, cajole, coerce and beat out the vendors for their own sample codes.
GCS/GE d--(d) s-/+ a C+++ U+++ P-- L+@ E-- W+++ N+ o+ K- w+++ O? M-- V? PS+ PE Y+ PGP t+ 5? X R+++ tv-- b+(+++) DI+++ D++ G e++ h--- r+++ y+++* Weapons extension: ma- k++ F+2 X
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If you use unfettered code, you take a risk. It's not an attack; it is abusing stupidity and they have my full support.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Price rises are coming, Intel tells customers, with inflation taking the blame. So you won't be able to pay for the chips you won't be able to get
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Sixty-eight percent of IT teams’ time is spent working on tasks that do not actually contribute to key business outcomes. We should have a daily meeting about this
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Kent Sharkey wrote: Sixty-eight percent of IT teams’ time is spent working on tasks that do not actually contribute to key business outcomes.
FTFY
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We surveyed more than 2,000 developers about whether GitHub Copilot helped them be more productive and improved their coding. Then, we matched this qualitative feedback and subjective perception with quantitative data around objective usage measurements and productivity. "But before I let that steam drill beat me down I'm gonna die with a hammer in my hand"
Code assistant assists coders. News at 11.
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Next week:
Research: How GitHub Copilot dumbs down programmers so they can't solve problems that open source hasn't solved for them.
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A web-based development environment fully optimized for Salesforce development and powered by Microsoft’s Visual Studio Codespaces. More force for your sales
I don't think there are that many Salesforce devs on here, but I try to cater to everyone.
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The space agency revealed the telescope’s images of the planet Jupiter, as well as an asteroid, used as reference targets when engineering teams were calibrating the observatory’s instruments. "But what exceeds all wonders, I have discovered four new planets and observed their proper and particular motions"
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IT departments are frequently feeling the sting of buyer's remorse following big-ticket enterprise technology purchases. Hopefully you don't regret buying this newsletter
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