[-] 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 2 months ago

Would be pretty useful, as far as I know there is no way to change /etc/{subuid,subgid} in the system configuration without manually editing.

Another annoyance with podman on guix is making / a shared mount doesn't work so changes in mounts aren't propagated.

69
0x1f53b (lemmygrad.ml)
[-] 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 3 months ago

My freshman year I had a windows VM, only for WeChat and MS Teams, but by 2nd year WeChat got Linux support and MS Teams can now run in the browser, so I deleted the VM halfway through 2nd year. Zoom can also run in the browser.

Also a good idea to make sure your microphone and camera works.

And don't update if there's a deadline coming up soon since it might break.

None of my professors required anything to be submitted as .docx. Every single general education class required PDFs for submissions, and programming classes were usually submitted by pushing to code to a Git repository. Group projects were all done in Google Drive which runs in the browser, otherwise latex usually worked (one prof even required latex). I never used LibreOffice, but I'm pretty sure it should be fine for PDFs.

Psychology might require a bunch of proprietary statistical analysis software that probably won't support Linux. I would say a windows VM is best for that. Although R is fine on Linux. I was in computer science so none of my classes required proprietary software. In total over every single class I think only C, C++, Haskell, and Python interpreters/compilers were needed which are all free software. In some of my classes professors said they would refuse to help anyone on Windows if they weren't using an Ubuntu VM. One even said he would subtract points if anyone asked a question about windows. One crazy prof said he would fail you from the class if he saw you developing in Windows instead of the VM. Also any classes that require Docker are going to be way easier on Linux. Some of my friends were electrical engineers and they had to use some big proprietary IDE's for flashing binaries to micro controllers which didn't support Linux, but they were using Windows anyways. Also any CAD software almost certainly won't work, a VM is needed for that.

If you do use a windows VM or dual boot or whatever, make sure to pirate Windows 10 LTSC since it has the least default applications installed and will run faster.

[-] 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 3 months ago

Doesn't bitcoins blockchain use some sort of consensus algorithm, so if one party has more than 50% of the compute power they control everything?

[-] 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml 34 points 4 months ago

I don't think Russia is begging the US

[-] 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml 19 points 4 months ago

So according to the posts he spent $80,000 of his own money to buy cloud services, DoS 2 routers for a day, then is suprised the CIA didn't hire him.

[-] 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 4 months ago

Doesn't that construction only work in categories that also contain their own morphisms as objects since a profunctor maps (Cᵒᵖ × C) → Set and not the same like (Cᵒᵖ × C) → C? Since the category of Haskell types special, containing its own morphisms, so the profunctor could be like (haskᵒᵖ × hask) -> hask? or I just don't understand it.

[-] 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml 34 points 4 months ago

I found it! its the Glagolitic script used in the 9th century before Cyrillic took over:

ⰀⰁⰂⰃⰄⰅⰆⰇⰈⰉⰊⰋⰌⰍⰎⰏⰐⰑⰒⰓⰔⰕⰖⰗⰘⰙⰚⰛⰜⰝⰞⰟⰠⰡⰢⰣⰤⰥⰦⰧⰨⰩⰪⰫⰬⰭⰮⰰⰱⰲⰳⰴⰵⰶⰷⰸⰹⰺⰻⰼⰽⰾⰿⱀⱁⱂⱃⱄⱅⱆⱇⱈⱉⱊⱋⱌⱍⱎⱏⱐⱑⱒⱓⱔⱕⱖⱗⱘⱙⱚⱛⱜⱝⱞ
[-] 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 4 months ago

I don't think so:

(ქართული)	გამარჯობა
[-] 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml 7 points 4 months ago

Doesn't look like it to me:

ልዩ ጊዜ ነበር። አሁን የሚሆነውን ለማስተዋል የኢንተርኔት አውራጃ ማረጋገጥ ነበር።
[-] 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 4 months ago

No that looks like

⌶⌷⌸⌹⌺⌻⌼⌽⌾⌿⍀⍁⍂⍃⍄⍅⍆⍇⍈⍉⍊⍋⍌⍍⍎⍏⍐⍑⍒⍓⍔⍕⍖⍗⍘⍙⍚⍛⍜⍝⍞⍟⍠⍡⍢⍣⍤⍥⍦⍧⍨⍩⍪⍫⍬⍭⍮⍯⍰⍱⍲⍳⍴⍵⍶⍷⍸⍹⍺
59
submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml to c/comradeship@lemmygrad.ml

They were blocking most traffic in and out of the entrances for a couple weeks at this point.

Last night at like 3am-ish. The local police seem to have brought in reinforcements from the other counties to try and out number the protestors.

https://ca.news.yahoo.com/police-raid-pro-palestine-encampment-151407490.html

One of my roommates was there at the time and got arrested, he isn't allowed back on campus for a couple weeks without getting arrested again, and finals are in 2 week so he can't take any in-person finals. Helping him move all his important stuff to his friends house.

At night usually a lot of people leave so the arrests missed most of the protestors. They probably attacked at night because there were less protestors. This morning when the news spread the protest seems to have reformed and is even bigger. Went to checkout the main entrance protest today, its huge now. There must have been like 400 people in just one rally. The entrance is completely blocked this time by barricades.

There really are 2 protests: the bigger Palestine ones and the TA's and are also joining in on the UAW strike. The Palestine protestors are blocking the main entrance while the TA's were blocking the side entrance. The TA protest hasn't reformed (yet) since the raid this morning. The problem for the administration is that TA's grade home-works, hold sections, and do research. If however many TA's get arrested the courses are going to start deteriorating.

So I guess my programming assignments won't be getting graded for a while, and grade are supposed to come out in less than a month. <(。_。)>. Also finals may be pushed online. So far I can confirm at least one of the TA's in my databases class wasn't arrested and is still holding section on zoom.

Also a couple days ago this email was sent to the entire school by the admin:

For the safety of the entire UCSC community, demonstrators must leave the main entrance and west entrance roadways. Blocking access to campus is dangerous and unlawful, and is preventing emergency vehicle access and preventing employees and students from leaving and from those who are currently on campus from accessing the childcare center. It is also preventing employees, such as dining workers and custodians, from entering campus for their evening shift. We call on the better judgment of the individuals in the area to deescalate the situation as soon as possible.

I haven't been able to help as much as I like, but since the protests started I've donated a couple blankets and supplies. Will maybe join again after I finish this weeks homework.

Hopefully divestment is successful. Things are probably only going to keep escalating from here.

34
holy crap (oc) (lemmygrad.ml)
3
submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by 82cb5abccd918e03@lemmygrad.ml to c/guix@lemmy.ml

Compiling a rust program works correctly, but when running the binary the dynamic linker says libstdc++.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory.

The only way I found to get around this in a manifest file is with force accessing gcc:lib which is a private package definition:

(concatenate-manifests
 (list
  (packages->manifest
   (list
    (list (@@ (gnu packages gcc) gcc-13) "lib"))
  (specifications->manifest
   (list
    "coreutils"
    "libgccjit"
    "clang-toolchain"
    "other stuff..."))))

but the @@ operator is kind of a hack since it accesses private definitions in a module and probably isn't mean to be normally used.

Has anyone found a proper way to link to libstdc++.so.6?

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82cb5abccd918e03

joined 8 months ago