no, we all work for each other.
MySQL was the original NoSQL. The wrong answer, faster.
People everywhere seem terrified of the console. It has a banner over it saying "Know What You Are Doing" and most would prefer to stab away at tree controls and tabs randomly filling in fields until it does something…
What's wrong with the console ?
OMG computers
You dawg!, I hear you like type systems ...
vultures
then Larry Page what ?
That's dynamically loaded, try it with the runtime $ gcc hello.c $ ls -l a.out -rwxr-xr-x 1 maht maht 4511 Oct 11 16:38 a.out $ gcc --static hello.c $ ls -l a.out -rwxr-xr-x 1 maht maht 574106 Oct 11 16:38 a.out
because GNU is Not Unix
Turn on locale UTF-8 for GNU software before benchmarking it to compare with Plan9 software. GNU stuff gets a speed improvement from assuming single byte characters.
It used to be the case that licenses required you to submit your modifications back to the source. Lucent's first stab at opening Plan 9 From Bell Labs back in '99 had such a clause.
> Fortunately, thanks to the GPLv2, all the significant changes come back to the mainstream kernel. How exactly, does that work ?
It's like Slashdot on April Fool's
Check your assumptions. The field could be updated at any time to any value by another connection. And who's to say we started at zero.
You didn't check for overflow.
tac filename.txt | sed 10q | tac
Fortunately not.
There's so much more to Acme than piping. Actions based on regex matching via the plumber for a start. Menus you can type / keep in a text file anywhere you like. No stupid colour syntax highlighting or pointless fancy…
1) install plan9port 2) use Acme 3) program !!!??? 4) profit
GNU is Not Unix
So security minded they're using GPG, no wait ...
WineCoffer sounds like Wank Offer
Yes, that's the one. There are more than one available. I'm not going to spam the name of mine. It's a service I wanted myself as an early adopter of handheld computers, outgoing SMTP is one of those things where the…
no, we all work for each other.
MySQL was the original NoSQL. The wrong answer, faster.
People everywhere seem terrified of the console. It has a banner over it saying "Know What You Are Doing" and most would prefer to stab away at tree controls and tabs randomly filling in fields until it does something…
What's wrong with the console ?
OMG computers
You dawg!, I hear you like type systems ...
vultures
then Larry Page what ?
That's dynamically loaded, try it with the runtime $ gcc hello.c $ ls -l a.out -rwxr-xr-x 1 maht maht 4511 Oct 11 16:38 a.out $ gcc --static hello.c $ ls -l a.out -rwxr-xr-x 1 maht maht 574106 Oct 11 16:38 a.out
because GNU is Not Unix
Turn on locale UTF-8 for GNU software before benchmarking it to compare with Plan9 software. GNU stuff gets a speed improvement from assuming single byte characters.
It used to be the case that licenses required you to submit your modifications back to the source. Lucent's first stab at opening Plan 9 From Bell Labs back in '99 had such a clause.
> Fortunately, thanks to the GPLv2, all the significant changes come back to the mainstream kernel. How exactly, does that work ?
> Fortunately, thanks to the GPLv2, all the significant changes come back to the mainstream kernel. How exactly, does that work ?
It's like Slashdot on April Fool's
Check your assumptions. The field could be updated at any time to any value by another connection. And who's to say we started at zero.
You didn't check for overflow.
tac filename.txt | sed 10q | tac
Fortunately not.
There's so much more to Acme than piping. Actions based on regex matching via the plumber for a start. Menus you can type / keep in a text file anywhere you like. No stupid colour syntax highlighting or pointless fancy…
1) install plan9port 2) use Acme 3) program !!!??? 4) profit
GNU is Not Unix
So security minded they're using GPG, no wait ...
WineCoffer sounds like Wank Offer
Yes, that's the one. There are more than one available. I'm not going to spam the name of mine. It's a service I wanted myself as an early adopter of handheld computers, outgoing SMTP is one of those things where the…