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Comment FreeBSD is what all servers should run (Score 1) 107

FreeBSD powers my personal infrastructure and has for decades. It is easy to use, not bloated (too badly, though you now have to take steps to keep that damn Wayland out of a server, WTF, but you can with /etc/make.conf). Having eventually made the shift to Poudriere, the package and code management is very good. Fixes for maintained packages are an overnight thing, but some of the major upstream dependencies have the same level of responsiveness as in Linux - better than any commercial software, but not as good as pure FreeBSD.

Moving from SVN to git kinda sucked, but now it works well enough and gets the job done and keeps the Linux heads happy.

Comment Re:Google should divest Chrome (Score 3, Informative) 141

That would be interesting. Some of that is available in IRS filings for instance, in 2023:
Their expenses were $39,845,284, with

  • 8.3% ($3,287,433) of that being Executive Compensation (not counting Baker's $6,223,660)
  • 25.4% ($10,106,669) for Other Salaries and Wages

Of course a lot of the increasing expenses over the years related to Mitchell Baker's ever ballooning compensation. I guess we'll find out this year if the new CEO is sucking up as much of the budget. But that's over $10M just for executives and the questionable value that they provide... all of the rest of the employees add up to less total cost.

Comment Re:Frivolous and wildly subjective. (Score 1) 52

"Ruggiero imagines one day pumping it through the aisles of retailers, triggering nostalgia while shoppers are browsing and hopefully buying more crayons."

This sort of advertising, especially, is a cancer on our society and the entire human condition. It's trading down human experiences and interactions (like friendly smiles, etc) for profit until they no longer have value and positive meaning to people. The obvious long-term outcome of this is a worse world and the people pushing it must know that it is unambiguously evil.

Comment Re:It's not like systemd doesn't work. (Score 1) 320

I just freshly installed Ubuntu 24.04 on a piece of hardware only to find that systemd-resolved fails resolving after a hour of uptime due to some bizarre nonstandard way of handing server responses*. I've been using linux since before Slackware, so I guess I'm old, but I haven't seen this level of brokenness (that wasn't tied to lack of specific hardware support) in decades.

What's being pushed out to "stable" releases of mainsteam distributions under the banner of SystemD is some seriously amateur-level stuff.

* I can't be arsed to find the discussion of the error right now, but it has the obligatory Poettering reply that everybody else in the world is doing it wrong and that putting the resolver into a non-responsive state is the expected and correct thing to do.

Comment Re:The human brain does the same thing... (Score 1) 182

Yes!

We must build an absolute monopoly on inventions which is permanent and heritable even if by so doing retard the progress of science and the useful arts. Without legislative protection, innovation would be like fire, expansible over all space, without lessening their density in any point; and like the air in which we breathe, move, and have our physical being, incapable of confinement, or exclusive appropriation. Society must give a permanent exclusive right to the profits arising from them, lest they be denied by their nature the status of property.

Comment Re:DEA shouldn't have a hand in healthcare (Score 1) 143

It doesn’t sound like fun to me, but what do you think is responsible for these jankers having to go to such lengths to get what would amount to a few bucks worth of product if it wasn’t illegal. It sounds like a medical problem, honestly. Once you get the cops involved, now you have two problems.

Comment DEA shouldn't have a hand in healthcare (Score 4, Insightful) 143

This is what happens when law enforcement gets to interfere with our country's healthcare. The idea that an entire society has to suffer poorer healthcare because a minuscule fraction of the population will use a drug to have fun is something only authoritarian goons could dream up.

The same situation is currently playing out with several ADHD drugs as we speak (mass shortages based on arbitrary DEA-imposed restrictions). It has also held back research into various psychedelic drugs as effective treatments for PTSD, treatment-resistant depression, and others.

The DEA has got to go, but a good first start would be keeping them far away from our medicines and healthcare. The idea that we have to have an entire office of armed police with the sole aim of making sure that a small subset of the population can't get high or self-medicate is asinine.

Comment Re: Good. (Score 1) 135

My spidy-sense was really tingling when I saw that, that something seems off with this dude. Fascinating, in hindsight, that it was right. Should probably listen to it more.

You totally should (within reason). Intuition is a cool property of pattern-matching neural networks like our brain. 'Reason' comes about when we can back up the outputs with logic, but there's often value in outputs that we don't have a framework for reasoning them through.

Often intuition is wrong, but surprisingly often it's right. Of course, without the ability to reason it through you can't tell which it will be.

Comment Re: Much Kudos (Score 1) 20

Yeah, anything coming from Google is automatically suspect. "Creepy advertising company finds a new intrusive way to collect more personal user data from deployed products. Shares some of it with users."

Working on cool science and tech for Google must be as frustrating as working for Microsoft Research must be. Do cool research to either have it completely ignored or twisted into some evil money grab.

Comment Re:Most customer-unfriendly OS in history goes to. (Score 3, Informative) 120

Mine does that whenever I use my (company issued) thunderbolt docking station. Apparently when I switch between booting with that station plugged in or not, that changes the "hardware configuration" enough that it needs the recovery key. I've basically memorized the stupid recovery key at this point.

Comment Re:Labiew sucks (Score 1) 74

You joke, but when I had to use LabView for a while I just kept requesting bigger and more monitors to make it tolerable. You can push things into sub-VIs to a certain extent, but you always end up with the screen-too-small problem as the complexity increases. Ugh... nightmares...

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