I read that part as the assembler itself never freeing memory during its work assembling. The assembled program can do whatever including using the stack and manual memory management.
Related question: What are the adversarial examples for human intelligence? We know some for the visual and auditory systems, but what about the arguably general intelligence of humans? Maybe we can work our way…
Is there an emulator available that one can try the distros on without owning the device?
I read that part as the assembler itself never freeing memory during its work assembling. The assembled program can do whatever including using the stack and manual memory management.
Related question: What are the adversarial examples for human intelligence? We know some for the visual and auditory systems, but what about the arguably general intelligence of humans? Maybe we can work our way…
Is there an emulator available that one can try the distros on without owning the device?