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They can try selling me an electric sports car the day they get the weight back under ~1500kg. Electric cars are fast in straight line, but that extra inertia is a killer in curves. I want a long range go-kart.

Dead Reckoning + Physical Media + Return to Base

What a laugher, of course it is not like that. Especially funny sounds the return to base function.

Multi-frequency communication, a lot of retranslators making you to be able to fly inside of caves, refusing to use Starlink in the areas having a bleeding-edge anti-starlink antennas deployed. Or just receiving Netflix-grade picture from the optical cable while reducing to zero anything emitting radio-signals.


France has its own self important cultural industry to pressure the government. And then sometimes the President himself is married to a pop star.

In this specific case, it's not culture though, it's the sports diffusion rights mafia (LFP, beIN, Canal+).

Funnily, of all your comment, the only word I objected to was the one right before "insulting": "almost". Thinking that LLM can replace humans outright expresses hubris and disdain in a way that I find particularly aggravating.

> it's not to my taste

It's not just you, it's universally tasteless and that's the point: It is a contrarian vehicle.

In an age where the Internet has flattened subcultures into surface phenomenons, the only remaining way to publicly distance yourself from normality is by making patently, obviously bad decisions and using the backlash to further fuel your ego.


Trading engine will not run Rails for sure but the web UI to monitor and control trades might do.

General administration is similar to Arch or any other regular distro. Package updates necessarily take longer because of recompiling but that's just CPU time. There are precompiled versions of big popular binaries (open office, Firefox, etc) that allow you to save a lot of time if you want.

Where you lose time is in trying to optimize your system and packages using the multiple switches that Gentoo provides. If you're the OCD twiddler type, Gentoo can be both extremely satisfying and major time sink.


When you say "There are precompiled versions of big popular binaries" - were you thinking of "firefox-bin" and such?

I think that for some years already - Gentoo has been providing binaries for "normal" packages - as long as your config/use-flags match (and if you turned on the option/flag to use binary packages).

And of course places with more than just a few Gentoo boxes were usually already running their own BINHOST setups long time ago.


I don't understand the time sink. Isn't spending time knowing intricate details about your system a good thing? You know better than most if you've gone that deep.

It's good for learning for sure but It's very easy to go too deep and spend time on pointless optimizations and customization instead of doing actual work.

What Gentoo really needs is an official immutability mechanism like ostree used by Fedora Silverblue or ZFS/btrfs snapshots of the root/boot volumes. This way the ever-experimental nature of the distro would be compensated by having an easy mechanism to rollback to previous known-good builds.

I haven't gotten around to experimenting with https://wiki.calculate-linux.org/templates and https://old.calculate-linux.org/main/en/calculate-assemble

TL;DR: you can pre-configure and keep updating/building new versions of your own live-boot image of Gentoo/Calculate. Which kind of get's you "previous known-good builds" just the other way around.

Oh and the other thing I also never needed to use is update/rescue of Gentoo/Calculate installation through it's flip-flopping between two root partitions.

Calculate installer by default creates two root partitions, but I've only ever used one. And so far `cl-update` never broke the system - even when I was so far behind that my version of python and glibc got masked (or maybe even removed).

Back on vanilla Gentoo - being that far behind usually meant it was easier to reinstall Gentoo from stage3 :D


You're not alone. Correctness first. Such complicated schemes should be backed with repeatable benchmarks so that their purported gains can be challenged later by simpler techniques. Too often clever optimizations with marginal gains make it to production and become maintenance liabilities.

This guy sure knows his Poutine. Unfortunately nothing described in the article is relevant without proper Linux support which is still unlikely despite Qualcomm's repeated pledges.

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