• 52 Posts
  • 20 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 9th, 2023

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  • ylai@lemmy.mlOPtoLinux@lemmy.mlFUSE Passthrough Mode Merged For Linux 6.9
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    9 months ago

    Well, if you have a constructive suggestion which site to link instead regarding kernel developments, I am all ears:

    • Not sure that raw commits are readable or have sufficient context for non kernel development readers here
    • LWN, particularly timely/kernel development news there, has gone mostly paywall, and there will be (legitimate) complaint if I link articles needing a LWN subscription

  • ylai@lemmy.mlOPtoLinux@lemmy.mlFUSE Passthrough Mode Merged For Linux 6.9
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    9 months ago

    Not sure what called for this blatant personal attack. My post history speaks for itself, quite in comparison to yours. And Phoronix is well-known Linux website, and its test suite is in fact even referenced in various regression tests/patches in LKML (also not sure what/if any kind of kernel development you have done).




  • ylai@lemmy.mltoAsklemmy@lemmy.mlHow long til Blu-rays get phased out
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    11 months ago

    Retention, or the lack thereof, when cold-stored.

    In term of SD or standard NAND, not even Nintendo does that. Nintendo builds Macronix XtraROM in their Game Card, which is some proprietary Flash memory with claimed 20 year cold storage retention. And they introduced the 64 GB version only after a lengthy delay, in 2020. So it seems that the (lack of) cold storage performance of standard NAND Flash is viewed by some in the industry as not ready for prime time. Macronix discussed it many years back in a DigiTimes article: https://www.digitimes.com/news/a20120713PR201.html.

    And Sony and Microsoft are both still building Blu-ray-based consoles.




  • There might be several misunderstandings:

    • Docker Desktop ≠ Docker Engine, and I think what you (and several in this thread) are thinking is actually Docker Engine. Docker Desktop ultimately includes a Docker Engine inside, but it does not appear you need that virtual machine (e.g. running non-Linux code). See: https://docs.docker.com/desktop/faqs/linuxfaqs/#what-is-the-difference-between-docker-desktop-for-linux-and-docker-engine
    • Docker Desktop is based on KVM, which already works with Flatpak. So this is not something new. For example, GNOME Boxes is available as Flatpak and provides a way to run KVM guests in SteamOS.
    • Starting with version 3.5 (the current stable) SteamOS already includes Podman with the default installation. And running the daemon-y Docker Engine “bare metal” is not going to be any easier with the immutable filesystem. While Docker Desktop solves this by using KVM, it adds another layer with performance loss, vs. just running Podman containers.

    So what you want is already available, and no Docker Desktop is actually needed.



  • ylai@lemmy.mltoMemes@lemmy.mlHow does she know...
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    1 year ago

    AMD’s support for AI is just fine

    This is quite untrue, especially if you do actual research and not just run other people’s models. For example, ROCm is missing in many sparse autograd frameworks, e.g. pytorch_sparse, or having a viable alternative to Nvidias MinkowskiEngine. This is needed if you do any state-of-the-art convnets with attention-like sparsity.





  • ylai@lemmy.mltoMemes@lemmy.mlWhen you hear someone pronounce GIF as 'JIF
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    1 year ago

    Nearly every single word in English that starts with a g followed by a soft ih/eh vowel is pronounced as a soft g, just a few:

    That is patently not true and blatant cherry picking, e.g. already contradicted by the lexically matching word “gift” (and there are “giggle”, “gild”, “girl”, “git”, “give”, “gizmo”, etc.). See Wikipedia, which referenced linguists studying this:

    An analysis of 269 words by linguist Michael Dow found near-tied results on whether a hard or soft g was more appropriate based on other English words; the results varied somewhat depending on what parameters were used.[11] Of the 105 words that contained gi somewhere in the word, 68 used the soft g while only 37 employed its counterpart. However, the hard g words were found to be significantly more common in everyday English; […]

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pronunciation_of_GIF#Cause

    Michael Dow is an associate professor in linguistics with specialization in phonology, by the way.

    and if you’re confused why others pronounce it with a soft G, they would seem to be simply more familiar with the English language 🤷‍♂️

    Well, clearly you are already not as “familiar with the English language” as you might think.