> In the above one-liner, we've basically reconfigured the stock compiler on Linux so it outputs binaries that'll run on MacOS, Windows, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and NetBSD too. They also boot from the BIOS. Please note this is intended for people who don't care about desktop GUIs, and just want stdio and sockets without devops toil
they also boot from the BIOS.... does this mean that I can achieve my dream of booting straight into a BBC BASIC emulator on bare metal(ish)?
"Participants responded to
a total of 18 tasks (or as many as they could within the given time frame). These
tasks spanned various domains. Specifically, they can be categorized into four types:
creativity (e.g., “Propose at least 10 ideas for a new shoe targeting an underserved
market or sport.”), analytical thinking (e.g., “Segment the footwear industry market
based on users.”), writing proficiency (e.g., “Draft a press release marketing copy for
your product.”), and persuasiveness (e.g., “Pen an inspirational memo to employees
detailing why your product would outshine competitors.”)."
I really wish there were a unified environment variable to enable colors for everything instead of having a separate one for everything or having to clutter your bashrc with a trillion aliases.
> In the above one-liner, we've basically reconfigured the stock compiler on Linux so it outputs binaries that'll run on MacOS, Windows, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and NetBSD too. They also boot from the BIOS. Please note this is intended for people who don't care about desktop GUIs, and just want stdio and sockets without devops toil
they also boot from the BIOS.... does this mean that I can achieve my dream of booting straight into a BBC BASIC emulator on bare metal(ish)?