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Wikipedia English also appears to be down.


And Cloudflare maybe? They just announced they wouldn't be cutting off Russia which might have been the reason but I think the other services affected use Google Cloud?


Cloudflare is working fine for me.. even Discord's CDN is behind it and working fine


working for me


Please read his books.


I've read a lot of them. The part I was unsure about was his being the first depiction of benevolent robots.


"Workspace is written from scratch. Some WindowMaker code is a part of Workspace (as well as configuration defaults) to provide window management functions. The code is tightly coupled with Workspace to provide seamless intergation. Configurable parameters of the integrated WindowMaker are spread across Workspace's Preferences and Preferences application."


Can you call it Itanic if it was around for more than a decade because of how well it sold and how many supercomputers chose to use it? I am familiar with the pain of Itanium, and I understand how hard it was to work with. I've kernel debugged an operating system on it. Yet it was still successful enough to be around for this long. I wouldn't call it "Itanic."


> Can you call it Itanic if it was around for more than a decade because of how well it sold

It didn't sell well, though. At all.

> and how many supercomputers chose to use it?

Here's a chart of supercomputer architecture by year: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Processor_families_i...

Itanium showed up around 2001, peaked in 2003 at about 100 systems, and was nearly gone by 2007.

However good it might have been hypothetically -- and I contend that it wasn't -- it was a market disaster.


The amount of effort put into this rebuttal is why I try hard to avoid reading the comments here.


I use operating system memory paging as an analogy for this: you paged it back in.


It's a really good page, too. Just across the street was the best smell & taste in all of spacetime, the original Espresso Vivace roastery...


Really surprised the article didn't mention the practice of money laundering.


If one wants to launder money, creating an eyebrow raising sale gathering press headlines and bafflement from insiders is not a great way.

You want to be under the radar for money laundering. Not impossible, but another explanation seems more likely. (I don’t mean an innocent explanation necessarily)


They may have underestimated the community surrounding gaming. "It's something my kid plays, who pays attention to this stuff?"


Ya, I think more likely a publicity stunt for an auction and grading company.


Barely mentioned, and the author makes us all die inside when they say "Too bad it was written for a whole different architecture and compiler so there is really no easy way for me to find out what it did."


As the hint explains, it's a combination of PDP-11 and VAX machine code, set up so that either system will run its own code and ignore the foreign code.

You can extract a few ASCII strings from the data. As the hint says: "Can you guess what is printed? We knew you couldn't! :-)"

The ASCII strings I found were "vax", "pdp", "str", "write", and " :-)".


So not only did they write something baffling, they also wrote it so that it was semi-portable.


I wonder what strange and interesting things in the computing world we’ve simply lost by forgetting and from moving on.


Why not make a blog post instead of an emoji-laden Twitter thread?


Just guessing here, but it might have to do with Twitter having 330 million users who might see his thread.


We have ruined the internet. :(


Guess I'm done reading the verge. I've watched many, many Starlink reviews out of curiosity and this is the only one so tinged by the author's mood.

It's clearly written as a kind of hit-piece. While other reviewers mention that the software specifically does not allow a device to be used outside of the area it is registered at (for FCC reasons), this piece mentions "The dish is small and light enough that you can easily move it to different locations, but you’re not guaranteed service anywhere but the address where you signed up." As if it's a coverage issue, and not the software blocking it from being used - which Starlink is very clear about.

This was bad.


How is this a hit piece? The quote is an objective statement of fact, and most of the review has objectively positive things to say about Starlink, especially considering that the author lives in rural America.

Starlink made bold claims. And in its present state, does not live up to them. Starlink doesn't get to excuse the bold claims it is making right now on the basis that it might one day live up to them. If they want to be judged on their performance today they need to stop basing their marketing around the version of Starlink 5 years from now.


They sort of made bold claims but they also called it their “better than nothing beta” to lower expectations. From starlink.com:

> During beta, users can expect to see data speeds vary from 50Mb/s to 150Mb/s and latency from 20ms to 40ms in most locations over the next several months as we enhance the Starlink system. There will also be brief periods of no connectivity at all.

(The trick is getting other people to do the marketing for you.)


I found Nilay's to be the most useful review I have encountered. It pulled-no-punches, as any good review must. I know from this review that Starlink, as it is now, would not be usable at my house in New York, nor at my house in California.

The California house depends on local microwave, which works pretty well in dry weather, but is not broadband by any modern standard. Years ago, ATT laid fiber to within, literally, yards of the house–just across the street–and collected a half $billion federal subsidy (paid by taxing old-fashioned, wired phone subscribers) for that, but never lit it. I was stuck on ATT 3Mb DSL for years, and dropped it the moment there was a viable alternative at twice the price. (I could have switched to Comcast, lately. But that would be Comcast.)

Starlink might be usable, in time. When it is, Verge most likely will publish another review. I expect it will also pull no punches, and I await it as eagerly as I await Starlink to leave Beta status. But my seething hatred for ATT will not fade in this lifetime. (Doubtless I would feel the same about Comcast, given any contact.)


You seem to have poor service that Starlink would greatly improve. I think you took the wrong message from the verge article that is exactly what everyone is complaining about.


Starlink, as it is now, would leave me wholly disconnected for at least half of any hour. The service I have is not fast, but it moves all the packets I send in any minute I send them (except during rainstorms) ...and gives me two static public IP addresses.

So, no, Starlink would not improve my service.


> Starlink, as it is now, would leave me wholly disconnected for at least half of any hour.

I don't know what you're talking about here. Starlink doesn't act that way at all. The uptime is very high in many cases. A lot of people have zero downtime on most days.


I believe you: you don't.

Starlink's own user manual says that even a single tree can block service, when the satellite needed is on the other side of it. The review usefully relays this essential information. Any review that does not reveal this has failed.

Only people who are not surrounded by 100 ft trees may be getting tolerable service. That would not include me.


> The uptime is very high in many cases

Many is not all.

> A lot of people have zero downtime on most days

Zero downtime on > 50% of days is a pretty low bar, and a lot of people have unobstructed line of sight to virtually all of the sky.

A lot of other people, however, don’t.


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