That table is unfortunately quite old. I can't personally say what have changed, but it is hard to put much confidence in the relevance of the information.
Yeah, also it doesn't compare actual implementations, just plain checkboxes. I'm aware of two specific substantial performance regressions for musl: exact floating point printing (it uses Dragon4 but implemented it way slower than it could have been) and memory allocator (for a long time it didn't any sort of arena like pretty much every modern allocator---now it does with mallocng though).
Working from the fact that the NetBSD sees the OHCI controllers which are on the Starlet's AHB this runs with AHBPROT disabled (as does most homebrew), so NetBSD can in theory not only interact with Starlet mailboxes (as any normal game), but can also do pretty much anything to it as the entire Starlet address space is R/W accessible from Broadway (which on the other hand makes interacting with Starlet pretty much irelevant for normal use, as you can interact with the hardware directly using normal drivers instead of going through IOS)
There are actually cross play solutions such as https://github.com/GeyserMC/Geyser, there are some limitation, but not too many. Basically disabling the features that only exists in one version.
I was an early user of Keybase, and at one point they started promoting this crypto currency, including giving away some starting capital.
I understand it as a serious project for payments, rather than a cash grab for early adopters.
After years of stable value (not even following inflation) it recently shot up in value on trading markets (Trump effect?). However it now seems to be going back down again.
What are your thoughts on this specific currency. Is it worth "betting on" (not specifically trading, but buying as a well functioning payment resource)?
You can do that but it's kind of overkill. With analog computing you think in the time domain with differential equations, and accuracy is more important than speed.
With synthesizers you think mostly in the frequency domain and speed is more important than accuracy. Integrators from AC become lowpass filters, adders become mixers*, multipliers become ring modulators, etc.
* In audio, a "mixer" is an adder. In RF a mixer is a multiplier.
I notice that many of the tools (at least in the repos linked) seem to have stopped development since a couple of years.
As some of these are wrappers for tools or use APIs that could mean that they do not work any more, or without special configuration. Or that things are stable, and the tools are "done".
What I have mainly have been looking for in the free software ecosystem is a good tool to work with PDF tagging/structure/element attributes.
At work I really have only been able to do the work I need on random PDFs with Adobe Acrobat. It seems strange that this is the case as PDF is now an open standard.