Massive piles of implementation bugs notwithstanding, See (on Apple TV+) is pretty neat if you’re into worldbuilding like I am.
@kas@enotty.dk @freemor@freemor.homelinux.net I doubt many want to browser-sniff. Unfortunately, I see browser sniffing used to work around a particular browser’s bugs, so browser sniffing isn’t going away anytime soon.
@mdosch@mdosch.de Apple refuses to ship GPLv3 software. bash has security bugs that Apple doesn’t want to backport. So they’ve switched default shells again, this time to zsh. (bash and the previous default, tcsh, still ship with the OS.)
Saw pokerstove in the new-formulae list in Homebrew. Installed it and ran ps-eval -g d AsAcAdAh2d, and after a few moments it told me that this particular hand has 99.998% equity. Turns out, “a pair of ones…and another pair of ones” is a better hand than Bugs’ tone of voice indicates.
@leo@www.gkbrk.com Hmm, also #txtnish is not showing your posts. Maybe there is a bug.
Everytime a x86_64 bug appears in the wild, a Sun SPARC designer opens another champagne.
Concept of the day: “Radar Chicken”, whereby two computer nerds encourage the other to file a bug report so the other doesn’t have to
Hackers hijack thousands of Chromecasts to warn of latest security bug – TechCrunch https://techcrunch.com/2019/01/02/chromecast-bug-hackers-havoc/
Am I the only one who thought the Bumblebee trailer was a trailer for a gritty remake of Herbie the Love Bug?
Bad idea of the day: a social network where post literally fade because the contrast is computed with the inverse of time. A spinoff where bugs slowly eat away at posts.
Supermicro boards were so bug ridden, why would hackers ever need implants? | Ars Technica https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2018/10/supermicro-boards-were-so-bug-ridden-why-would-hackers-ever-need-implants/
dategrep has seen a workload of changes, I would be very happy about any feedback or bugs! :) https://github.com/mdom/dategrep
dategrep has seen a workload of changes, I would be very happy about any feedback or bugs! :) https://github.com/mdom/dategrep
To distribute or not to distribute? Why licensing bugs matter | the morning paper https://blog.acolyer.org/2018/06/25/to-distribute-or-not-to-distribute-why-licensing-bugs-matter/
Fuck, Land doesn’t seem to get that any major anomoly would be signal AF & therefore, hiding it behind redundancy is a bug in any information-theoretic channel
countercomplex: The resource leak bug of our civilization http://viznut.fi/texts-en/resource_leak_bug_of_our_civilization.html
Operant Conditioning by Software Bugs – Embedded in Academia https://blog.regehr.org/archives/861
Finding a CPU Design Bug in the Xbox 360 | Random … https://randomascii.wordpress.com/2018/01/07/finding-a-cpu-design-bug-in-the-xbox-360/
There are two classes of bug. One is where the program doesn’t match your mental model of the program. The other is when the problem doesn’t match your mental model of the problem. Most bugs are both.
@kas@enotty.dk Mhh, i explicitly allow 60 seconds in my rfc3339 regex. Is there already a bug report for python?
@kas@enotty.dk Mhh, i explicitly allow 60 seconds in my rfc3339 regex. Is there already a bug report for python?
@phil@philmcclure.duckdns.org You mean the leap second in evil.txt? It’s expected to break clients … :) You can just skip lines that you can’t parse. Although it’s a valid date according to rfc3339. Maybe file a bug against coreutils?
@phil@philmcclure.duckdns.org You mean the leap second in evil.txt? It’s expected to break clients … :) You can just skip lines that you can’t parse. Although it’s a valid date according to rfc3339. Maybe file a bug against coreutils?
@kas@enotty.dk Heh, cool video but it sounds like a bug? https://www.reddit.com/r/videos/comments/5yeefj/alexa_are_you_connected_to_the_cia/depeufn/
@kas@enotty.dk Heh, cool video but it sounds like a bug? https://www.reddit.com/r/videos/comments/5yeefj/alexa_are_you_connected_to_the_cia/depeufn/
@dave@davebucklin.com It’s probably https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=195792, should be fixed for #txtnish
@dave@davebucklin.com It’s probably https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=195792, should be fixed for #txtnish
@clementd@clementd-files.cellar.services.clever-cloud.com @n1ko@nicolas.perriault.net Maybe you could file a bug report on github? With your python version and the installed modules.
@clementd@clementd-files.cellar.services.clever-cloud.com @n1ko@nicolas.perriault.net Maybe you could file a bug report on github? With your python version and the installed modules.
Quake for Oculus Rift
My Oculus Rift CV1 finally arrived last week, so of course I had to update my fork of the excellent Quakespasm engine for the new Oculus 1.4 API.
While I was at it, I also fixed a number of bugs, included support for the Rift’s headphones and the XBox One controller – I’d still recommend you play with mouse & keyboard, though. Controls are set up with reasonable defaults, but you can of course change everything in the options menu. There’s also … ⌘ Read more
My counter wasn’t incremented because of a seven year old bug … https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/8774cf8 #xfs
My counter wasn’t incremented because of a seven year old bug … https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/8774cf8 #xfs
Bug bug bug bug bug / new build all should be fixed / bug bug bug bug bug
Bug bug bug bug bug / new build all should be fixed / bug bug bug bug bug
@Virtusize Seems like you caught a Twitter bug
NixOS 13.10 released
We have released NixOS 13.10, the first stable branch of NixOS.
Its goal is to provide a safe branch for production environments
that need bug fixes and security updates, but not the
potentially destabilising changes that sometimes occur on the
unstable branch. You can get NixOS 13.10 ISOs and VirtualBox
appliances from the download\
page. See the announcement
for … ⌘ Read more
Nix 1.6.1 released
Nix\
1.6.1 has been released. This is primarily a bug fix
release but has some minor new features. See the release\
notes for details. ⌘ Read more
NixOps 1.0.1 released
NixOps\
1.0.1 has been released, a minor bug fix release. See the manual
for details. ⌘ Read more
Nix 1.5.3 released
Nix 1.5.3
has been released. This is primarily a bug fix release. See the release\
notes for details. ⌘ Read more
Nix 1.4 released
Nix 1.4
has been released. This is primarily a bug fix release that
addresses a security problem in multi-user mode. See the release\
notes for details. For installation information, see the manual. ⌘ Read more
Nix 1.3 released
Nix 1.3
has been released. This is primarily a bug fix release. See
the release\
notes for details. For installation information, see the manual. ⌘ Read more
PatchELF 0.6 released
PatchELF\
0.6 has been released. Apart from some bug fixes, it adds
support for executables produced by the Gold linker. See the README
for details. ⌘ Read more
Nix 0.15 released
Nix\
0.15 has been released. This is a bug fix release. See the
release\
notes for details. For installation information, see the manual. ⌘ Read more
Nix 0.14 released
Nix\
0.14 has been released. This is primarily a bug fix
release. See the release\
notes for details. For installation information, see the manual. ⌘ Read more
Nix 0.13 released
Nix\
0.13 has been released. This is mostly a bug fix release,
although it also adds some new language features. See the release\
notes for details. For installation information, see the manual. ⌘ Read more
Nix 0.10.1 released
Nix\
0.10.1 has been released. It fixes two obscure bugs that
shouldn’t affect most users. ⌘ Read more
Nix 0.10 released
Nix\
0.10 has been released. This release has many
improvements and bug fixes; see the release\
notes for details. ⌘ Read more
Nix 0.9.2 released
Nix\
0.9.2 has been released released. This is a bug fix
release that addresses some problems on Mac OS X. ⌘ Read more
Nix 0.9 released
Nix 0.9
has been released. This is a new major release that provides
quite a few performance improvements and bug fixes, as well as a
number of new features. Read the release\
notes for details. ⌘ Read more