ooterness

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 16 points 1 day ago

IF YOU DON'T RULE AND STONE, YOU AIN'T COMING HOME!

[–] [email protected] 5 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Does that require admin access? It wasn't their machine, it was one the school provided for the auditorium.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 5 days ago (1 children)

This wasn't their machine, it was one the school provided for the auditorium.

[–] [email protected] 26 points 5 days ago (8 children)

I saw that happen once in a big presentation.

There was a team of students presenting their work to ~200 people. Right in the middle, a pop-up says updates are finished and the computer needs to restart. It has a helpful 60-second countdown, but “cancel” is grayed out, so all they can do is watch.

I was only in the audience and I still have nightmares.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago (2 children)
  1. Do you know anybody from "Ohio"?
  2. Have you ever been to "Ohio"?
  3. Do you know anybody who has ever been to "Ohio"?
[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago

Bicycles are heresy confirmed.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 3 weeks ago

Not the hero we need, but the hero we deserve.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 weeks ago

WE'Z ZOGGIN' WORKIN' ON IT. WAAAAAAAAAAAGH!!!

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 weeks ago

We are the Cube Rule. Lower your shields and surrender your ships. We will add your food's biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. Your food culture will adapt to service us. Resistance is futile.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

I've had great luck running HomeAssistant on an R.Pi with the "HUSBZB-1" USB dongle. Zigbee support is perfect so far. Z-Wave required installation of an additional tool, but also working just fine.

 

I'm trying to find a sci-fi short story. Unfortunately, I do not remember anything about the author or title. It is at least a decade or two old, available for free online.

The entire story is set aboard a starship in deep space, and everyone has advanced technology (nanomachines?) that can repair tissue damage that would normally be deadly. Unfortunately, the ship is hit by a massive radiation burst, nearly killing everyone aboard, causing all kinds of damage, and contaminating much of what's left. Somehow, the worst affected have massive brain damage, and the nanomachines are driving them to instinctively seek raw materials for repairs--which can only be found in the brains of relatively intact survivors.

In short, the whole setup is basically an excuse to have space zombies. The nanomachines keep them alive even when their organs are falling out, but they're dumb and slow and they want braaaaains.

Other things I remember:

  • The protagonist is female, and was protected by the initial burst because she was working inside a large water tank.
  • The protagonist is trying to help her romantic partner, who is comatose, but it's implied they might wake up as a zombie.
  • The protagonist is trying to avoid killing the zombies when possible, because there is still a chance of curing them.
  • The protagonist is looking for raw materials that aren't radiation-contaminated, to help her partner and repair the ship.
 
12
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by [email protected] to c/advent_of_code
 

If you're writing Advent of Code solutions in Rust, then I've written a crate that can fetch the user input data directly from the main website.

Long story short, you provide it a login token copied from your browser cookies, and it can fetch the input data by year and day. Inputs are cached locally, so it'll only download it once for a given problem. This was heavily inspired by the PyPi advent-of-code-data package.

Unlike other AoC-centric Rust crates, that's all it does. The other crates I've seen all want the code structured in a specific way to add timing benchmarks, unit testing, and other features. I wanted something lightweight where you just call a function to get the input; no more and no less.

To use the crate:

  • Follow the AoCD instructions to set the AOC_SESSION environment variable.
    This key is used for authentication and should not be shared with anyone.
  • Add the aocfetch crate to your Cargo.toml [dependencies] section:
    aocfetch = { git = "https://github.com/ooterness/AdventOfCode.git" }
  • Import the crate and call aocfetch::get_data(year, day) to fetch your input data.

An example:

use aocfetch;

fn main() {
    let input = aocfetch::get_data(2023, 1).unwrap();
    println!("My input data: {}", input);
    println!("Part 1 solution: 42");    // TODO
    println!("Part 2 solution: 42");    // TODO
}

If this goes well I will submit it to crates.io, but I wanted to open this up for beta-testing first.

 

This is an open-source FPGA project I've been working on for several years now. It's an Ethernet switch for FPGAs, but you can mix-and-match the usual RMII/RGMII/SGMII interfaces with unconventional options like a plain old UART.

My company uses it internally, but we decided to release it as open source. (Currently LGPLv3 but open to other weak-copyleft suggestions.)

Among other things, we've recently incorporated some new technology that allows picosecond-accurate timestamps to be compared across different digital clock domains. You can think of it as a group of NCOs that all track the same best-fit line.

53
Pyrrhic victory? (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Reddit users will prevail but also be injured so badly they need life support for 10,000 years. (It's a metaphor.)

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