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Comment Re:Delaying the inevitable. (Score 1) 28

QEmu is the end-all be-all of emulated systems. It's basically, the Linux of emulation.

While I use it mostly by command line, there are many GUI frontends for QEmu. "Aqemu" is the one I know off the top of my head which is decent. I don't think it has the ability to use the snapshot API, so if you need that then you may need to find another GUI or modify it yourself.

Comment Not really. (Score 2) 27

But the initial wave of enthusiasm could still peter out, especially as token costs accumulate and regulators warn of security vulnerabilities. Zhipu this week raised token prices on its new OpenClaw-optimised AI model by 20%.

"Output is extremely low: ordinary people spend tens or hundreds of yuan, burning through a bunch of tokens and in the end, they might only get a pile of useless data," read one post on Rednote, a social media platform, titled "Goodbye OpenClaw."

It would appear that people are personally finding out that AI is overhyped.

Comment Monoculture (Score 1) 28

True enough but the migration cost is immense

The real problem here is that businesses are overly focused on profits which leads to homogeneous environments that rely on specific products and product-specific integration. It's much wiser to hedge your bets with a more diverse environment in preparation for a product to be unavailable, be it discontinued, "upgraded", or bought. Being forward-thinking isn't free which is why profit-centric businesses won't do it.

TL;DR: Monoculture results in bad outcomes like this "death sentence"; invest in diversity.

Comment Re:JFC I'm So Confused (Score 2) 11

It's just an incomprehensible madhouse of spaghetti at this point.

This madhouse was always going to be the endpoint when people started distributing "containers" instead of just building the app properly. However, it's clear that containers have become the only option for script based languages because they are already a security nightmare.

Comment No. (Score 1) 1

The answer is "no" because literally nothing fits your bullshit requirements list because if you really have been working on embedded systems then you already know this to be true. You're basically doing a "cheap, easy, and fast" selection and telling people you need all three.

If you want embedded, you get embedded.
If you want to run a big OS, you get one that will run a big OS.
If you want to pretend these are all the same thing then you can fuck off.

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