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They haven't considered that, because until this week they didn't need to. Some Linux Foundation projects use Zulip, and the team behind the project seem willing to host for free.


(1985)

Previous discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30895210

If you're interested in the history of Commodore, I thoroughly recommend the Commodore International Historical Society at https://commodore.international/. Dave has pulled together many of the people who were there at the time. For example, here's an Amiga panel from the recent VCF East: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_AYDkuMg-U


And the part 2 of the Amiga Panel, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vvTOFYykBTQ

There is an older one from VCF, which were a couple of sessions, where I was proven wrong, some of the engineers actually wanted the Amiga to be UNIX like first, the way it turned out to be was a sequence of decisions that eventually made it the way it was in the end. Thankfully, as it had plenty of cool ideas, many of which never got out of the Amiga into other platforms.

Looking forward to watch these.


There are also Brian Bagnall's Commodore history books, of course.


From the FAQ:

> If some eligible files were found, the amount of disk space that can be reclaimed is shown next to the “Potential Savings” label. To proceed any further, you will have to make a purchase. Once the app’s full functionality is unlocked, a “Review Files” button will become available after a successful scan. This will open the Review Window.

I half remember this being discussed on ATP; the logic being that if you have the list of files, you will just go and de-dupe them yourself.


> the logic being that if you have the list of files, you will just go and de-dupe them yourself.

If you can do that, you can check for duplicates yourself anyway. It's not like there aren't already dozens of great apps that dedupe.


> there aren't already dozens of great apps that dedupe.

Most of those delete rather than use the features of APFS.


Is it just me, or is the font in the title bar/menus, off?


It's the "large"/high-DPI version of the font, intended for larger displays and resolutions like 1024x768 and up. The size and style of the system font in Windows 3 is not fixed, but depends on your display driver and what mode it's in. There would often be different choices like "1024x768 (small fonts)" and "1024x768 (large fonts)"


Tetrate and Bloomberg want to contribute their code to Envoy to create "Envoy AI Gateway", similarly to how there is an "Envoy Gateway" spec. Do you see this as being complementary or competitive with your work?

https://tetrate.io/press/tetrate-and-bloomberg-collaborate-o...


It's early days, so while there might be some overlap, I am sure there is a lot that we can do together to build complimentary products.

Based on the press release, its kinda hard to tell exactly how different/alike we will be, but Arch will always be "designed-first" for prompts and LLM application workloads without exposing all Envoy related features. And Envoy is "designed-first" for micro-services application workloads. So there will be some overlap but our design principles will deviate over time I feel. But we are very open to collaborating with the community here...


> There was another BBS based off WWIV in Pascal, but I don't remember the name.

You're probably thinking of Renegade, which lives on at https://renegadebbs.info/


Before there was WordPress, the most popular blog CMS was Moveable Type. It had a "generate static files" option. (I believe this is how Daring Fireball is still published today.)

Surely this is the "best of both worlds" answer?


Yes; it's referred to in Oxide's RFD about RFDs [1] https://rfd.shared.oxide.computer/rfd/0001 but the referenced URL is 404 unless you're an Oxide employee.

[1] https://rfd.shared.oxide.computer/rfd/0001#_shared_rfd_rende... [2] https://github.com/oxidecomputer/rfd/blob/master/src


That link is out of date. The site and backend are now open source. Only the repo containing the RFD contents is private.

https://github.com/oxidecomputer/rfd-site

https://github.com/oxidecomputer/rfd-api


It wasn't lost. The guy who sat next to Warhol as he created it, has had it for the entirety of the intervening time. (That's some "provenance".)

The thing that Debbie Harry said she had one of two of was a /print/ of the images.

There's some more context here: https://pagesix.com/2024/07/29/lifestyle/long-lost-andy-warh...


A caption from that article: "Warhol also made a digital Botticelli for the Commodore". So many articles over the last few years have implied he made that Venus picture in its entirety. It was created by Avril Harrison, among many other images she created for EA's marketing, for the program that became Deluxe Paint. The image they always show is Avril's image after somebody (perhaps Warhol, perhaps it was somebody demoing it to him) used the brush tool to simply copy one eye and paste it in the middle.


As opposed to Maniac Mansion, where you could die if you drained the pool and waited too long to refill it.

(Among many other ways, which you can find here: https://www.maniacmansionfan.50webs.com/waystolose.html)


The server you linked seems to be down, here's an archived version:

https://web.archive.org/web/20240529033339/https://www.mania...


... and then Gilbert saw the light, wrote this article and the rest is history.


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