Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | SbEpUBz2's commentslogin

It sure is a nice walled garden, but it can also be pretty restrictive: You can’t subscribe to iCloud from a regular browser, which makes those privacy benefits inaccessible from Linux, while Apple is perfectly happy to take my payment info for Apple Music or Apple TV.


Broadcast errors are not only interesting to watch, they also made TV feel human and alive. Nowadays, watching most cable channels feels like staring at the output of a VLC playlist with ten movies on loop.


GNOME maintains GNOME OS.


A lot of the base for GNOME OS was also used for automated testing IIRC. I don't know if that is the case for KDE Linux (or Neon).


There's waypipe.


I can't unban myself from the demo :)


I am reading it wrong, or the math doesn't add up? Shouldn't it be 138240 GB not 138240 TB?


You’re right, OP got the math wrong. It should be:

  1,440 boards × 96 GB/board = 138,240 GB


Either way, that doesn't exactly sound like a "storage-free" solution to me.


Just whatever you do, don't turn it off!


"What does this button do?" Bmmmfff.

On the TRS-80 Model III, the reset button was a bright red recessed square to the right of the attached keyboard.

It was irresistible to anyone who had no idea what you were doing as you worked, lost in the flow, insensitive to the presence of another human being, until...

--

Then there was the Kaypro. Many of their systems had a bug, software or hardware, that would occasionally cause an unplanned reset the first time, after you turned it on, that you tried writing to the disk. Exactly the wrong moment.


Oh, the Apple ][ reset button beat the TRS-80 Model III "hands down" many years earlier, with its "Big Beautiful Reset Button" on the upper right corner of the keyboard.

It was comically vulnerable -- just begging to be pressed. The early models had one so soft and easy to trigger that your cat could reboot your Apple ][ with a single curious paw. Later revisions stiffened the spring a bit, but it was still a menace.

There was a whole cottage industry aftermarket of defensive accessories: plastic shields that slid over the reset key, mail-order kits to reroute it through an auxiliary switch, or firmware mods to require CTRL-RESET. You’d find those in the classified ads in Nibble or Apple Orchard magazines, nestled between ASCII art of wizards and promises to triple your RAM.

Because nothing says "I live dangerously" like writing your 6502 assembly in memory with the mini assembler without saving, then letting your little brother near the keyboard.

I got sweet sweet revenge by writing a "Flakey Keyboard Simulator" in assembly that hooked into the keyboard input vector, that drove him bonkers by occasionally missing, mistyping, and repeating keystrokes, indistinguishable from a real flakey keyboard or drunk typist.


> Because nothing says "I live dangerously" like writing your 6502 assembly in memory with the mini assembler without saving, then letting your little brother near the keyboard.

RESET on the Apple II was a warm reset. You could set a value on page zero so that pressing it caused a cold start (many apps did that), but, even then, the memory is not fully erased on startup, so you'd probably be kind of OK.


kvirc ftw!


WhatsApp disabled creating screenshots of profile pictures (this annoyed my grandmother), but it cannot really do this when using through the web interface.


What? You tested a PWA against a Safari version from 2012 and it worked? That's funny.


It was an odd bug related to starting a session in PHP, it involved cookies.

But all of you are right. The safari version that i tested don't even support arrow functions.


Last release was from 2015.


It looks like we're both wrong, time flies!

>Safari 5.1.7 for Windows, released in 2010 and now outdated, was the last version made for Windows. https://support.apple.com/en-us/102665


So he tested it on a version for the iPad 1? Safari didn’t have pwa features at that time, the concept of pwa's wasn’t even a thing then.


The mGBA PC emulator supports running the Game Boy Camera ROM and passing video from a webcam or from a still image you select. I think some GB emulators on Android also support this, but I haven't tried them.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: