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Joke’s on them, I’ve never been “well rested” in my life or my digital afterlife.
See also @mdhughes@appdot.net
Joke’s on them, I’ve never been “well rested” in my life or my digital afterlife.
It’s still a surviving working copy. “I” go away and reboot every time I fall asleep.
“She”. The gag of SwiftOnSecurity is it’s Taylor Swift, posting infosec. Tho these days she mostly trolls like this.
If they had “fixed” it, there would be a “My Computer” icon. No such thing exists, go TRY the Infinite Mac I linked above.
Yes your uncle who works at Nintendo ^W Apple told you about it.
Governmental research. There was Project Blue Book, as I mentioned, which was inconclusive and then ended.
No such demo happened. They unveiled the 128K with that System 1.0 on stage at a special event. The Lisa has a different UI, but also can’t do what’s described.
This story is a lie.
There’s no “computer icon”. Dragging the System disk to trash ejects it on a classic Mac. If you burrow down into System, you can try deleting system files… which are locked and can’t be deleted.
You can test this yourself on Infinite Mac
Is there other intelligent alien life in our Galaxy? Probably. Given how fast life formed on Earth, there must be millions of other life-bearing planets, and intelligence can’t be that rare, but it might be short-lived.
Are there UFO sightings? Yes, people do see unidentified flying objects. Some of them can be explained, some cannot.
Are the UFOs aliens? I don’t know, I’m a “curious agnostic” on the subject.
There’s a LOT of UFO sightings, and evidence from good observers, including US Navy aviators. The US Air Force continues not to cooperate, and officially denies any sightings exist. The very enthusiastic refusal to look at evidence, aside from Project Blue Book, is suspicious.
It’s technically plausible that someone within 50-ish light years of Earth could have heard our radio, sent a ship here, and use drones or manned ships to observe us without interacting. There could also be many other explanations.
We don’t know, and until the last couple years there was no effort to investigate.
Reset, New Game.
I recognized the twist at a certain conversation early in the movie. It’s not really hidden, or at least not well.
Bruce Bethke, the guy who actually invented cyberpunk and wrote the story Cyberpunk, wrote a book Head Crash. In which the VR hotsuit includes a “ProctoProd®” for bass. Bruce’s predictions have turned out more accurate than anyone else’s.
Some of Rudy’s books are free, and they will blow your minds. Software, etc. and Postsingular as “what technology can do to us”, and White Light as “how does infinity work in a story context”; he also has a couple non-fiction books on infinity.
Hard, computational SF aren’t given nearly the respect they should, and these apply math, comp sci, and physics in a way nobody else does. If there’s any civilization in the future, they’ll be seen as visionary.
Runners-up are Robert L. Forward, Alastair Reynolds, but Forward has very little computation, and Reynolds doesn’t show his math too often.
You can get the same basic CS education and write your own OS, it was in my 4th year CS classes, we mostly just implemented Minix 1.0 but you could get as weird as you want.
Then you have to make enough libraries to start porting things to it, or write everything from scratch.
One of my favorite hacks like this is SectorLisp, which fits a Lisp (sort of) in a boot sector.
There’s other, more verbose, regular expression languages, for instance SRFI-115 for Scheme. But the hard part isn’t the syntax, but actually thinking about patterns, so it won’t help you any.
Just get the O’Reilly bat book and learn. So what if it overwrites 10% of your brain and you can’t remember your mother’s face, you’ll have a useful skill.
I grew up during the Cold War, I had zero expectation that I’d live to adulthood, and I’m still unconvinced the world after 2000 exists. The way to cope is nihilism and/or activism.
Nuclear war, global warming makes the Earth uninhabitable, new plagues wipe out everyone, AI poisons us or creates nanotech grey goo, fascists take over and gas everyone who isn’t them, a dinosaur-killer meteor hits the Earth again, eventually the Sun expands and fries the planet. You personally are going to die, probably long before any of those.
So you can either say “fuck it” and do your usual stuff anyway, or get involved in trying to stop or delay one of the disasters. Have fun with it.
Or as Morty says: “Everybody’s going to die. Come watch TV.”
Safari’s fast, less crashy, highest privacy protections, and uses less memory per tab; I often have hundreds of tabs so that’s important. It also has the best inspector, much better than Firebug. Add in StopTheMadness and an adblocker (currently using Ghostery), and it’s pretty great.
Degoogled Chromium is useful for sites that don’t work in Safari, or as a sandbox I don’t mind crashing in development.
I’ve given up on Firefox, it’s too fat and bloated.
MacPorts is nice for keeping disk space used down, and being compiled as fast/small as possible.
Homebrew wastes a lot of space, most packages contain all their dependencies and won’t be optimized for your hardware.
Nix is really for people moving a workflow over from Linux, it’s not what you’d normally use for Mac native tools.
Even original Nolan Bushnell’s Atari, was bought by Warner Brothers, then (mostly) bought by Jack Tramiel after leaving Commodore. So it’s not an unbroken line. Infogrames Fr’s new management has quit with the NFT nonsense, and is making Atari-related stuff that isn’t awful.