Maintainers Don't Scale
45:07
7 жыл бұрын
Advances in CPU Frequency Management
32:24
Lightning Talks and Conference Closing
2:18:20
Rewriting MMU for fun and profit
46:23
Decoding Satellites with SatNOGS
29:16
The kernel report
44:09
7 жыл бұрын
Doing 'Blockchain' Things
26:06
7 жыл бұрын
The Business of Community
45:21
7 жыл бұрын
libtls: Rethinking the TLS/SSL API
44:36
Open Source Accelerating Innovation
40:18
Go for DevOps
27:19
7 жыл бұрын
ODF: Great standard, but what works?
38:28
Election Software
44:06
7 жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@gdotone1
@gdotone1 8 күн бұрын
freebsd is slow.
@heypen9375
@heypen9375 18 күн бұрын
Great resources. As a typedesigner who interested about fonts as software this is indispensable reference. Thank you.
@billyswong
@billyswong Ай бұрын
In 19:33, it was shown Rust allows B and C depend on different versions of D, then A depends on B and C without D causing conflict. What wasn't discussed is why B and C can't both depend on the same version of D. The lack of such discussion make the presentation missed a key issue that new package managers such as Cargo, Nix or Guix can't solve - how can one keep a system and the key applications within running in long term without either give up and be insecure, or get dragged into endless tedious marathon in software maintenance, even for software applications that are supposed to be feature-complete and no security bugs in code written by themselves. The fundamental problem is software projects are getting worse and worse in backward compatibility promise. In the old days, software projects would accumulate backward compatibility debt then broke them in one big lump unless a particular software behaviour is impossible to keep without leaving security holes open. Software projects only need to check if they need to adapt their code for dependency changes for those big jumps plus those special updates. Such checking is manageable. Linux distributions that offer long term support also only need to maintain a relative small number of outdated versions of a software packages, one for each big backward compatibility breakage jump. Now it becomes a total mess. software packages like to break backward compatibility a lot more frequently. New package or dependency management tools are indeed getting better at coping with the coexistence of multiple versions of the same software. But they can't fix the security problem automatically. Let say package B depends on old D but is incompatible with new D. Now if somebody finds a security hole in both old D and new D, we need to either patch both old D and new D, or rewrite B to support new D. the capacity of old D and new D coexist together is useless in this case. In the old days where there were only a small number of old Ds, some software project Ds may write the fixes themselves, or some distributions may take on the job and backport the fixes. But with so many number of incompatible Ds in the modern ecosystem, the amount of workload becomes horrible and unworkable. So now they push the responsibility to project B, then to A, then to any projects that depend on A. This has become a new species of dependency hell.
@jakobw135
@jakobw135 Ай бұрын
Which CPU and GPU manufacturers use the A.R.M. architecture, besides Apple?
@JunaidHasan23
@JunaidHasan23 Ай бұрын
Great talk
@robotron1236
@robotron1236 5 ай бұрын
I have a t430 and I swapped in a 2.7/3.7ghz quad core from aliexpress for like $23.
@johanneskingma
@johanneskingma 5 ай бұрын
Is there a "freeBSD sucks" video series and why not?
@ml1186
@ml1186 6 ай бұрын
Nice!
@SuppressedOfficial
@SuppressedOfficial 6 ай бұрын
This loser's talks are just so cringe...
@picklerix6162
@picklerix6162 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for this video. I am part of a new team working with an Arm-based SoC.
@as-tm7np
@as-tm7np 6 ай бұрын
what was the guy at the end trying to say?
@user-eq6ml6yh6q
@user-eq6ml6yh6q 6 ай бұрын
Gavin is my uncle
@dastin7276
@dastin7276 7 ай бұрын
Thank You.
@ReluctantReader
@ReluctantReader 7 ай бұрын
cuckbsd
@leathernluv
@leathernluv 7 ай бұрын
I don't always agree with this guy, but I do like to hear what he has to say.
@ChrisStavros
@ChrisStavros 7 ай бұрын
33:36 "She is a person, she can do person things, go off and be a human for a change" I wish people would drop these stupid redditisms from their speech. It makes you sound really retarded, even if you had a legitimate point to start with. Nobody thinks you're funny with this "I did a science" etc. shit. It was never cute or funny, don't put in your conference script.
@ltxr9973
@ltxr9973 8 ай бұрын
Hate this leftist cunt. When he tells you something, do the opposite.
@xcoder1122
@xcoder1122 8 ай бұрын
25:15 Stop using mailing lists for announcements or technical discussions.. Nothing is a bigger time killer than having to constantly read mailing lists to not miss an important announcement and nothing is less effective to follow an important discussion or figure out the current state of something than mailing list archives, especially if you need a summary 4 years later and were not part of the discussion. There is a reason why no bigger and successful company in the world with hundreds of home office workers and maybe thousands of local office workers uses mailing lists anymore for decades for anything that is important to run that business. Mailing lists are like using CVS, today. Use live chat (text, voice, video) to discuss issues, document results in text files (plain text, mark down), that can be distributed online (via git, a wiki, a ticket system), use RFCs, PEPs, etc. as a base for changes and use version control to document their history of change, allow people to quickly pull final results from a server, without having to search through thousands of mailing list entries in a useless mailing list archive where the only question is what sucks more: The limited search abilities, so you find nothing or way too much, or the limited ability to display results in a user friendly way?
@anonamouse5917
@anonamouse5917 8 ай бұрын
Comments are enabled! I guess that means Benno did NOT insert a bunch of indefensible woke garbage into his otherwise brilliant lecture.
@SuppressedOfficial
@SuppressedOfficial 6 ай бұрын
Nah, it's still there. I take it you didn't listen long enough to find it? I don't blame you.
@anonamouse5917
@anonamouse5917 6 ай бұрын
@@SuppressedOfficial Correct. Although I am a penguin for life, I'm not super concerned about what goes on under the hood. edit -- after reading through the comments I see Benno wishes to redefine meritocracy. I may have to watch the whole thing now to see a smart man spew idiocy.
@fringeelements
@fringeelements 8 ай бұрын
Isn't this guy a f'ing white male? Why doesn't he give his speaking spot up to some Laquisha? The idea that he's better at tech stuff is just his white male perspective.
@qazwsx872
@qazwsx872 8 ай бұрын
One of the best videos I have seen in my life. Big big thank you !
@Kit_Bear
@Kit_Bear 8 ай бұрын
She's wrong about the Chubb Detector lock. a locksmith didn't have a regulator key to reset the detector. in the first generation Chubb detector lock they had a regulator key but the owner had it. It was considered to be an inconvenience to carry around another key that would be used once, twice if ever at all. In the second generation of Chubbs detector lock the owner could reset it with the user key by turning the key in the locking direction then turning it back in the unlocking direction. The mechanism is a lever lock not pins or whatever else she mentioned.
@drstrangelove09
@drstrangelove09 8 ай бұрын
I see nothing wrong with meritocracy and redefining it is not cool. You cannot not make something good into something bad by defining the work, which is all too common today.
@climbeverest
@climbeverest 9 ай бұрын
This is incredible, do such events happen all over the world? What event was this lecture a part of? Do such events happen in US cities?
@RuVi78
@RuVi78 11 ай бұрын
I would know if a cpu soundcard or a top soundcard make the diference in an SDR ?!
@marksmith2540
@marksmith2540 Жыл бұрын
Meritocracy is a dirty word? That's very troubling.
@kalidsherefuddin
@kalidsherefuddin Жыл бұрын
Thanks
@kalidsherefuddin
@kalidsherefuddin Жыл бұрын
The great
@roz1
@roz1 Жыл бұрын
Really clarified a lot of my concepts that i didn't understand
@baremetaltechtv
@baremetaltechtv Жыл бұрын
Wait for us to build an asic first he says. 7 years later no update on the website since 2016.
@danielcr0w
@danielcr0w Жыл бұрын
"hte" stands for hex terminal editor.. isn't that obvious?
@RogerBarraud
@RogerBarraud Жыл бұрын
Now we know why Android phones are throwaway after a couple of years 😞
@quant-prep2843
@quant-prep2843 Жыл бұрын
what sort of background do you need to get started on kernel bypass technologies? coding entire TCP/IP stack from scratch in c will be good ?
@diviyampat9996
@diviyampat9996 11 ай бұрын
nope advance c and knowledge of kernel (network and system ) with network protocols. after that you can use DPDK to code it out
@KabelkowyJoe
@KabelkowyJoe Жыл бұрын
Beeno do have Steve Jobs manner of talking "um", you know um and if i was to guess for who he is working Apple would come first to mine mind, also his talks are nice to listen even if you dont have damn about what is he talking about.
@mdukasa
@mdukasa Жыл бұрын
Based
@tivi5977
@tivi5977 Жыл бұрын
24:33 Emoji archaeology 101 🤣
@ChrisHerlein
@ChrisHerlein Жыл бұрын
Awesome work! Thanks for sharing. I will try to apply thia knowledge for a new racing car in Argentina!
@thegabrielcho
@thegabrielcho Жыл бұрын
I love this man
@konstantinNeo
@konstantinNeo Жыл бұрын
Can you rebuild thinkpad p50 laptop battery?
@adimattadimatt
@adimattadimatt Жыл бұрын
Great talk !
@anthonyesweeney
@anthonyesweeney Жыл бұрын
Should Perforce not have been in there somewhere, or did I dream that?
@jmyers9853
@jmyers9853 Жыл бұрын
i plug an old IBM Model M into the laptop and it is so much better.
@talhatariq653
@talhatariq653 Жыл бұрын
i like old thinkpads and old fujitsus i use arch btw
@rickwezenaar
@rickwezenaar Жыл бұрын
lets also not forget: freebsd is FAST. in more than one way, but obviously at the least in networking. this is one of the best reasons to use freebsd, even now. ya :) ^_^
@hrnekbezucha
@hrnekbezucha Жыл бұрын
For anyone new, the open alternative LICO-12 is not being updated much but do have a look at TIC-80. Free, open, and actively developed. Also with an active community, and with bunch of other languages than just Lua.
@Reichstaubenminister
@Reichstaubenminister Жыл бұрын
"If we had my political views protected by a code of conduct, people wouldn't vehemently disagree with me trying to drag politics into technological fields."
@georgemwidima3851
@georgemwidima3851 Жыл бұрын
I am a great user of Windows OS. I run thousands of Pograms especially Office and English<>Swahili Translation softwares. Is there any Windows OS Emulation on Linux or Android where I can Windows Program on Android especially those that are not fully deveped for Android like FLuency Now CAT Tool for example? Thank you for the video.
@luciusartoriusdante
@luciusartoriusdante Жыл бұрын
pretty interesting.
@jeongtaepark7861
@jeongtaepark7861 Жыл бұрын
This is the most helpful talk, thanks.👍🏻
@mdr721
@mdr721 Жыл бұрын
I think the hp dev one fits the requirements 3:50