@jlliagre Hmmm.... not sure whether I should or not. I'm sure Linux has its own culture and POSIX may interest mostly the company executives of Unix/Linux adopters?
@GratefulDisciple Solaris still had an edge over Linux in some domains not because of its POSIX compliance but because of some of its capabilities, like containers, dtrace and ZFS.
@jlliagre Yes, that "copy-on-write transactional model" caught my eye as I scanned the Wikipedia article, which is necessary to support snapshots & rollbacks.
This one should be a great sentence in ZFS brochure: "ZFS does not ship with tools such as fsck, because the file system itself was designed to self-repair. " Imagine that, no need for fsck after a power failure or kernel panic.
@jlliagre Yes, that Wikipedia article on ZFS wowed me.
@jlliagre Incorporating features normally not part of the file system layout makes a lot of sense, resulting in a file system that is a lot more "intelligent" than other file systems.
I'm glad that OpenZFS has been available on Linux for some time, being included by default in some distros as a kernel module and survived GPL legal compatibility.
@Robusto Hehehe.... to me as well. I see the filesystem I use in my computers like buying a good tire and forget about it. Here in Canada I have to change to Winter tires every year; once I've made my selection, I just watch the tread depth.
@Robusto Yup. Newer generations are really spoiled. They probably cannot appreciate various dilemmas and compatibility/configuration issues, even to the exact sequence on how to install a driver.
Time to go back to 2024; it's great reminiscing the world of computing from the 1990s. Have a great week, everyone.
Gah, you had to bring that up, didn't you? What you didn't mention was that long wait while you installed the driver, wondering if it would be successful and you would get control back. "Hmm, it seems to have stopped. Should I let it go or take some action. But if I do that, it could corrupt the system. Hmmmm. What to do?"
Anyway, on the client side, more and more things run on a browser so the underlying OS doesn't matter a lot and on the server side, most of the things run on virtualized environments so there is no need to install any driver either.
@jlliagre Yes. Still remember playing with VMWare workstation edition and was impressed about its ability to support various graphics adapter and USB devices. As a "client" of virtualized VMs (I'm not the VMWare administrator), I have been comforted many times on how rollbacks are realiable and instantenous, and backups are copy-consistent.
@Robusto Hmmm... in what way? Is it in computing technology or other areas?
I'm mostly worried only in the social media's and AI tools' capability to propagate conspiracy theories and misinformation to less-discerning consumers, especially teenagers.
But for progress in hardware, software, cloud infrastructure, and services, I'm a happy camper in the increasing power and options that are available. As long as I'm constantly re-educating myself, of course.
@Robusto For science, I see it as having potential to improve human life condition through things like designer medicine, more diagnosis tools at the hospital, better material (through material science), and greater insights through massive data analysis.
@Mitch :-) I'm hoping to learn some life lessons from reading the plays. A friend's favorite is Macbeth which he read during his college years; give insights about rage.
@tchrist I saw that play acted at the Guthrie in Minneapolis. I had read it before, and seen the old film with James Cagney as Puck, but when I saw it acted it was sheer magic. And sides-splittingly funny to boot.
> Researchers have developed a near-perfect method for diagnosing Parkinson's disease by analyzing emotional brain responses through EEG and AI. x.com/NeuroscienceNew/status/1868714916493877583
> The study revealed that Parkinson's patients process emotions differently, focusing on intensity over valence and struggling to recognize emotions like fear, disgust, and surprise.