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

Familiarity, I suppose.

I'm not a part of the Windows XP community, but I've gotten close. I love that I can make it look just like Windows 2000 and that I know where all the little knobs and dials are. I can get a Windows XP installation configured to be exactly as I want it to be very quickly and I know it won't suddenly change on me.


Anything for Win9x?

I found out the other day you can use modern clang-cl with the MSVC6 headers and it just works. you can download them from here https://github.com/itsmattkc/MSVC600 or just copy it from an install if you have one handy.

then run (something like) this:

  clang-cl /winsysroot:"" /DWINVER=0x0400 /D_WIN32_WINNT=0x0400 -m32 /GS- -march=i586 -Wno-nonportable-include-path /imsvc"C:\MSVC6\VC98\Include" hello.c -fuse-ld=lld-link /link /SAFESEH:NO /SUBSYSTEM:WINDOWS,4.0 /LIBPATH:"C:\MSVC6\VC98\Lib" user32.lib kernel32.lib msvcrt.lib
I don't know if it's any better or worse than MinGW practically but it is definitely cursed.

I'm guessing this no longer qualifies as "modern," since the last update was in 2018 and is no longer in active development, but I'd like to say that the 32bit version of the Tiny C Compiler by Fabrice Bellard works on Windows 98 SE.

https://www.bellard.org/tcc/


I haven't tried it but i saw this a few days ago: https://github.com/crazii/MINGW-toolchains-w9x

Thank you!!!

> A bunch of people wasting years of their life, not to mention all the resources, is a tragedy worth avoiding.

Is it? We live in a world in which social safety nets are eroding; an economically-divided one in which the middle class is rapidly disappearing.

These things (e.g. bullshit projects/jobs) are a form of "white collar welfare", no?

That's not bad. It's not like we're actually going to fix the underlying problem.

Perhaps another bored patent clerk will use his downtime to change the world.


> You can easily walk next door and chat or just say hello when you see someone outside.

I have no problem with socialization and I have an unusually-active social life for a thirty-eight year old married man with three kids, so I clearly don't lack initiative.

With that being said, all of my neighbors are either elderly, shut-ins, or just don't want to be bothered; even the ones with kids.

My wife & I helped organize a Block Party last year and I'm fairly certain it resulted in 0 new friendships for any of the attendees.

What's the solution here? Friendships need to have mutual interest, no?

I think it's a circular problem. Like, my kids don't go outside much because there are no other kids outside to play with.


> As a gamer one of the most annoying things in a videogame is "pop in"

Plenty of NES gamers use this to their benefit since state is usually not retained for enemies which have been "popped out".

This makes Ninja Gaiden a bit easier. It's quite the opposite of annoying!



> I could see it working well for PCs too

I moonlight in film restoration. One 2hr movie out of our scanner is easily 16 TiB or more depending on the settings we scanned with.

Getting this uploaded to a remote server would take ~39hr over a fully-saturated 1Gbe pipe.


Clearly one use case where it wouldn't work.

On the other hand I'm a software engineer and my incredibly powerful MacBook could be not much more than a fancy dumb terminal - to be honest it almost is already.

If I can play a very responsive multiplayer game of the latest call of duty on my $300 TV with a little arm chip in it, then I could well imagine doing my job on a cloud Mac if the terminal device looked and felt like a MacBook but had the same tiny CPU my TV has.

Not sure if I'd choose it as a personal device but for corporations it seems a no brainer.


Is this guaranteed to be atomic on all filesystems?

For POSIX, yes.

https://rcrowley.org/2010/01/06/things-unix-can-do-atomicall...

Windows has a deep well of POSIX in the kernel (plus hard file locks), and it appears to hold there.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_POSIX_subsystem


It’s even atomic on NFS. In fact, it’s probably the only reliable locking mechanism on NFS.

> I don’t get why they think “professional” is a generic tier.

The target market is prosumer, not true professional.


I don't think there's that much of a distinction.

The real difference is that a "true professional" already has the software—purchased at full price by themselves or by their employer—and doesn't need a subscription in the first place.


The biggest distinction, in my experience, is that prosumers tend to be means-focused and professionals tend to be ends-focused, so there's less zealotry and evangelism in professional circles.

Also in professional circles, there's usually one or two industry standards and you just use what everyone else is using.

I wish I could see you try to tell this to my father when he was working manual labor. I'd pay money.

Manual labor which was so grueling that he had sue his company in order to retire early because he could literally no longer walk and required surgery to remove the extreme bowing in his legs.

You could come in, look at the latest Creosote burns on his skin, and tell him that something-- anything! --would be better than watching an hour of Football.

And, while you're at it, you could try to convince him that smoking's bad too.


Another commenter twisting my words -- I'm not saying your father shouldn't be allowed to watch football. I'm saying he has other options, and he's not railroaded into only watching football.

Also, he should probably quit smoking (unclear if it's too late for that, if so I'm sorry)


> Another commenter twisting my words

Sorry! I wasn't in a great place when I wrote my reply last night. I'd delete it if I could.


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

Search: