I get why Gilbert and the mouse ended up in the same place, but what did Kermit and Goku done?
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ReginaPhalange@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Anthropic/OpenAI may be spending more than $1000 for every $100 you pay themEnglish
6·7 days agoOh come on bubble, why won’t you crash already?
ReginaPhalange@lemmy.worldto
Political Memes@lemmy.world•"Socialism will make life hard!" (Proceeds to show a picture of reality)
2·14 days agoIsn’t there a leap from “workers should own their workplace” to “the people should own the workforce”? Like the difference from Steam’s business model, and full blown USSR communism?
Care to share some tips? I feel I’m getting there, trying to navigate old ERP interfaces, new web interfaces, and AI interfaces, and a mix of boomers, millennials, Gen Z as user base.
Jesicaaaaaaaaaaa
ReginaPhalange@lemmy.worldto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•foss nerds stop being condescending to those who don't know the same things you do challenge (impossible)
1·1 month agoThe Fast-MBysoon Project
Fast-MBysoon (Microkernel-Based YAML Synchronisation Object Notifier) is an ultra-low-latency middleware layer designed for distributed industrial robotics.
In high-stakes environments—like automated assembly lines or autonomous warehouse swarms—different hardware modules need to share state updates without the overhead of a bloated OS. Fast-MBysoon treats system configurations and sensor states as YAML-defined Synchronization Objects.
By operating on a microkernel architecture, it ensures that when one robot arm’s “Object” (e.g.,
current_velocity) changes, every other node in the cluster is notified with nanosecond precision, bypassing traditional networking stacks.
Core Architecture
The system relies on a “Pub-Sub” model where the microkernel acts as a high-speed traffic controller for YAML-serialized state blobs.
- The Registry: A lightweight table in kernel space tracking which nodes care about which YAML keys.
- The Sync-Object: A versioned memory segment representing the “Source of Truth.”
- The Notifier: A hardware-interrupt-driven signal that wakes up subscriber threads the moment a bit flips.
Abstract Pseudo-Code
The following represents the high-level logic of the Fast-MBysoon kernel loop and a typical client interaction.
1. The Microkernel Dispatcher
This runs in the privileged ring of the microkernel, managing memory gates.
# Kernel Space: The "MBysoon" Heartbeat function KERNEL_SYNC_DISPATCHER(): while true: # Wait for a hardware interrupt from a Node event = WAIT_FOR_INTERRUPT() if event.type == "OBJECT_UPDATE": # Identify the YAML object being changed target_obj = Registry.lookup(event.object_id) # Validate the new YAML schema against the blueprint if VALIDATE_SCHEMA(event.payload, target_obj.blueprint): # Atomic swap of the object in shared memory ATOMIC_COMMIT(target_obj.memory_address, event.payload) # Notify all subscribers via direct kernel signal for subscriber in target_obj.subscribers: SIGNAL_THREAD(subscriber.thread_id, "STATE_CHANGED")2. The Client-Side Implementation
This is how a robotic “Gripper” module would interact with the “Arm” module’s state.
# User Space: Robotic Gripper Node import MBysoon_Client as mb def ON_ARM_MOVE(new_state_yaml): # Logic to adjust gripper pressure based on arm speed speed = new_state_yaml['velocity']['vector_sum'] if speed > 5.0: ACTUATE_GRIP_STRENGTH("HIGH") # Initialization # 1. Map the remote "Arm_Status" object to local memory arm_status = mb.subscribe("industrial_cluster/arm_01/status.yaml") # 2. Assign the callback for notifications arm_status.on_update(ON_ARM_MOVE) # 3. Execution loop while system_running: # The MBysoon kernel handles the heavy lifting # This thread sleeps until the Notifier wakes it up mb.AWAIT_NOTIFICATION()
Why “YAML”?
While binary formats are faster, Fast-MBysoon uses a pre-compiled “YAML-Binary” hybrid. This allows engineers to write human-readable configurations for complex robotic behaviors that are “baked” into the microkernel at boot time, combining developer-friendly syntax with machine-speed execution.
ReginaPhalange@lemmy.worldto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•foss nerds stop being condescending to those who don't know the same things you do challenge (impossible)
291·1 month agoChrome based browsers are riddled with privacy invasive features, data collection etc…
Also, ad blocking in chrome is crippled purposely because Google wants ad revenue.
Firefox has less of these anti features, and there are plenty of Firefox derivatives that have none of them.
ReginaPhalange@lemmy.worldto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•I was a week away from buying a Pixel Pro 10 for GrapheneOS
101·1 month agoDesktop site is going to require QR scan.
I don’t know what they are going to do about “I don’t have a phone” / “I only have a dumb phone” population. I suspect that sometime soon I’ll have to buy a stay-at-home Google certified device, to bridge the locked down features and services.
Then nearly fourteen billion years ago expansion started. Wait…
I once was curious about what happens when an American visit my country and dial 911 in a hurry, as a reflex. It turns out that you reach an automatic exchange that asks what type of emergency service you need, and redirect your call.
I wonder if more countries have that.
How high were you
How exactly is a proof of work engine suppose to run, without any JS work?
ReginaPhalange@lemmy.worldOPto
techsupport@lemmy.world•PPPoE troubleshooting under OpenWRT
1·2 months agoThe reason that I didn’t think that you are right is that I’ve literally copy pasted the credentials from the ISP portal.
Level 1 support, when he asked my credentials - did not raise any issue when I repeated them to him.
I did end up talking to a lvl 2 support.
He did a reverse-facebook-pitch “drop the the” and by the he meant the “.net” suffix at the end of the username - AS IT IS SPECIFIED ON THE ISP PORTAL.
This was a week long frustration that was never meant to be.
(Is it the tacky lyrics?)
Oh no it’s not the why
Dude, chill, breathe.
Just breathe,
Breathe until all you can breathe is your life.
Then bleed just to know you’re alive.
ReginaPhalange@lemmy.worldOPto
techsupport@lemmy.world•PPPoE troubleshooting under OpenWRT
1·2 months agoIn the imaginary scenario that they left the web portal of the GPON open, and left the default credentials untouched, what can I learn from it? What exactly am I looking for?
ReginaPhalange@lemmy.worldOPto
techsupport@lemmy.world•PPPoE troubleshooting under OpenWRT
1·2 months agoIt wasn’t a ISP configured router. It was entirely mine. I do suspect different things being sent in stock/openwrt. If I was able to revert to tplink firmware I would chase this lead, but for now - I bought another TP link router, waiting for it to arrive, then arranging a technician to pair the new router with the GPON (thus abandoning OpenWRT efforts entirely)






Hmm