Thankful Machine

@thankfulmachine@oldbytes.space
185 Followers
104 Following
1.6K Posts

HARD/SOFT TINKERER TYPE 4, creating a nu wave in the retro scene.

Studying retro computer and console platforms, systems/graphics/sound programming.

I'd appreciate you pinning an #introduction toot before following! It's good for you and everyone else!

Trying to be thankful for something every day!

No content originating from this account may be used for the training of any artificial intelligence or machine learning. All rights reserved.

Fuck your "AI" "art"

#nobot #nobridge

GitHubhttps://github.com/thankfulmachine
PROMnounsshe/her
Oh look, an example of why large, inhumane, unmoderatable instances suck just came in from mastodon.social. Spam is only the least harmful example of what kinds of sewage are going to flow out of the #threads pump. #meta #fedipact

Still putting together a Pentium III machine and had to take a detour to learn about Serial Presence Detect, which wasn’t present on some PC133 RAM I purchased. Pretty interesting as it’s a 512MB module, the maximum my motherboard supports. I think maybe I got a reject. The mobo doesn’t seem to much like the fact that it can’t get SPD data and there aren’t any facilities in my BIOS to manually identify the RAM.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serial_presence_detect

#retrocomputing #electronics

Serial presence detect - Wikipedia

nobody i've seen trying to criticize fedipact in depth seems to actually like understand the point of it lmao

they think it's all about data scraping or opposition to meta on principle or just being gatekeepy or something

some of what they bring up are valid concerns, but far from my main one. my biggest concern here is entirely practical: allowing threads onto fedi will bring about a torrent of hate

the reason i started it was always "protecting queer people and other marginalized groups on here from harassment"

further reading: https://fedipact.online/why

#FediPact #meta #threads

🖤 Why? 🖤

How Meta could kill the Fediverse, a look at historical precedents.

https://ploum.net/2023-06-23-how-to-kill-decentralised-networks.html

At the end of this post, you will find many translations: French, Spanish, German, Italian, Turkish, Russian

How to Kill a Decentralised Network (such as the Fediverse)

How to Kill a Decentralised Network (such as the Fediverse) par Ploum - Lionel Dricot.

After years of effort by a small team, some of the talks from Vintage Computer Festival 6 — which happened 20 years ago, in 2003 — have been recovered! The recordings were in very poor condition and took extreme measures to recover. The audio is often not good! But the presentations include the voices of several people who have passed: Jef Raskin, C. H. Ting, John Ellenby, and Gary Starkweather.

The talks are:
David Jaffe / C. H. Ting / Kevin Appert / Dwight Elvey – Forth Programming Language
https://archive.org/details/vcf2003_forth

Jef Raskin – Apple and the Humane Environment
https://archive.org/details/vcf2003_jef-raskin

John Ellenby / Gary Starkweather / Dave Robson / Peter Deutsch / Charles Simonyi – Xerox Alto panel
https://archive.org/details/xerox-alto-panel

Len Shustek – Computer History Museum
https://archive.org/details/len-shustek-computer-history-museum

Bruce Damer – The Joys and Trials of Computer Collecting
https://archive.org/details/bruce-damer-computer-collecting

The web page for that event is: https://vcfed.org/events/archives-show-summaries/vcf-west-archives/vcf-west-6-0/

Forth — David Jaffe, C. H. Ting, Kevin Appert, Dwight Elvey : Bruce Damer : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

David Jaffe, C. H. Ting, Kevin Appert, Dwight Elvey – ForthA presentation recorded at Vintage Computer Festival West 2003, which was held at Computer...

Internet Archive
So, you're telling me there are designers that work at LinkedIn..?
It's 2023 and I'm getting a landline.

For your 6502 multiplication needs:

https://github.com/TobyLobster/multiply_test

#6502

(not mine. Was just shared, thought I'd share further, as I know some folks here do 6502/6510.)

GitHub - TobyLobster/multiply_test: Comparing 6502 multiply routines

Comparing 6502 multiply routines. Contribute to TobyLobster/multiply_test development by creating an account on GitHub.

GitHub

Well, I found a case. Not precisely what I wanted, a little more 2000 than 1998, but it makes sense and, most importantly, exists. I feel the sun has set on 90s machines. Like real sunsets, it seems to speed up as it finally happens. It’s pretty sad. I wonder how many are rusting away in the landfills.

Computing is so weird now.

Is oldbytes okay? I feel like the site's performance is way, way down, both text posts and assets.