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I thought that the blog's domain looked familiar. The author maintains an awesome and well maintained Emacs starter kit https://codeberg.org/ashton314/emacs-bedrock

Hey! Thanks for the kind words. :) I'm working on some updates for the upcoming release of Emacs 31. Should be good!

Rancher Desktop comes to mind. Maybe Podman Desktop https://podman-desktop.io/docs/migrating-from-docker

It's been ages since I used VirtualBox and reading the following didn't make me miss the experience at all:

> Eventually I found this GitHub issue. VirtualBox 7.2.4 shipped with a regression that causes high CPU usage on idle guests.

The list of viable hypervisors for running VMs with 3D acceleration is probably short but I'd hope there are more options these days for running headless VMs. Incus (on Linux hosts) and Lima come to mind and both are alternatives to Vagrant as well.


I totally understand, Vagrant and VirtualBox are quite a blast from the past for me as well. But besides the what-are-the-odds bug, it's been smooth sailing.

> VMs with 3D acceleration

I think we don't even need 3D acceleration since Vagrant is running the VMs headless anyways and just ssh-ing in.

> Incus (on Linux hosts)

That looks interesting, though from a quick search it doesn't seem to have a "Vagrantfile" equivalent (is that correct?), but I guess a good old shell script could replace that, even if imperative can be more annoying than declarative.

And since it seems to have a full-VM mode, docker would also work without exposing the host docker socket.

Thanks for the tip, it looks promising, I need to try it out!


> though from a quick search it doesn't seem to have a "Vagrantfile" equivalent (is that correct?)

It's just YAML config for the VM's resources:

https://linuxcontainers.org/incus/docs/main/howto/instances_...

https://linuxcontainers.org/incus/docs/main/explanation/inst...

And cloud-init for provisioning:

https://gitlab.oit.duke.edu/jnt6/incus-config/-/blob/main/co...


React Native doesn’t depend on Electron for desktop apps either. It renders using native UI components and don’t use a browser engine.


I know react native for windows is a thing, but is it on par with electron these days? my understand is that it was way beyond, but I could def be wrong


Learning effort aside, there’s also the ZFS hardware requirements issue. I bought a four bay NAS couple years ago and looked into TrueNAS. I (somewhat) remember coming across details such as ZFS benefitting from larger amounts of ECC RAM and higher number of drives than what I had. This post covers details about different types of caches and resource requirements:

https://www.45drives.com/community/articles/zfs-caching/


Hurl's another great option for this https://hurl.dev/


For anyone curious about accessibility support, looks like it's a WIP with contributions from System76 staff <3 https://github.com/iced-rs/iced/issues/552

And TIL about AccessKit https://github.com/AccessKit/accesskit


> cassette deck on his desk

Greybeard reporting for duty: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commodore_Datasette


Looks like the C64 is behind it (underneath a..?) and there’s a small corner of 5.25” diskette station further back.

Probably not his daily drivers.. :)


Yeah, behind datasette it looks like there's C64 C parked, and above is a laser 300 (which makes sense if guy is australian) and we can also see 1541-ii behind that, on the top.


Right, laser 300 was called the VZ300 here. I'm out of desk space so I had to put the VZ300 on a stand above my C64C. Maybe AI can finally help me code some C64 and VZ games. :-)


If only! It's kind of a blessing and a curse for us who still code for c64 (demo scene). It looks like llm may help you, but it's usually gibberish 6502 asm. I've seen similar with z80 but on spectrum.


I think generating assembly with an LLM would be like copying from a magazine back then: nothing learned.

But I wonder, do LLMs help explain chunks of 6502 assembly code, in your experience? Say, if one was learning.


yeah that certainly does happen. Especially if you give it the context of the machine since 6502 itself and opcodes do you no good unless you know the memory layout/ map which is in a sense what machine you're on. NES and C64 are 6502, heck even SNES is but 6502 opcodes are nothing since action is in memory you're interacting with.

When you provide context and the memory map, it does help explaining what algos you're looking at and what's going on. I've had a bit more luck with gemini rather than claude on this vs in general claude codes better. ChatGPT is for the most part lost in hallucinations.


Another way to interpret the parent comment would be that a lot of people are autistic.


The parent comment is also saying if they weren’t autistic, half the it force would be gone. Sounds pretty black and white.


It’s saying that the conditions and traits that tend to select for IT people is often represented in autistic populations. Anyone that’s managed in IT can attest to this. Maybe “half” was a figurative exaggeration for effect, but you seem to be injecting an entirely different meaning and bias into the comment.


[flagged]


> I’m not vilifying you, it was just a poor choice of words.

You're not being honest here. Questioning someone's belief and calling it gross is vilifying, regardless of any agreement or lack thereof from a broader community. Additionally, finding the one disagreeable point and harping on that instead of any of the rest of the points they made is another means of vilification.


I literally did not say this. Go back and read it.


>Say somehow you could eliminate autism spectrum disorder - there goes half your IT staff.

If they didn’t have autism, they wouldn’t be in IT


I’m not sure you are actually reading the sentence. Since you seem insistent on not doing so, I’m done with this conversation.


> what your company likely needs is some implementation of libvirtd or proxmox. run your workloads on rootless podman or (god forbid) deploy to a single VM.

Even with a single VM, someone's company probably will also want a reverse proxy and certificate management (assuming web services), automated deployments, provide secrets to services, storage volumes, health checks with auto restarts, ability to wire logs and metrics to some type of monitoring system, etc. All of this is possible with scripts and config management tools but now complexity is being managed in different ways. Alternatively use K3s and Flux to end up with a solution that checks all of those boxes while also having the option to use k8s manifests in public clouds.


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