Essential /g/ programs? Reset my PC due to seasonal cleaning and was wondering what programs /g/ can't live without.
Already have Xchat. Firefox, 7zip, MPV, ccleaner
>>57473321
What a weird notion. If you already don't know about a program, you can live without it.
>>57473338
You know what I mean, don't be technical
torrents
>Atom
>Notepad++
>Visual Studio Code
Which one is the best?
>>57472679
>no emacs
>no vim
Visual Studio Code
>>57472702
>emacs
Go fuck yourself
>vim
Outdated
Flop or not?
>>57472413
Normies will lose these a lot.
To avoid the annoying questions like
>where did your expensive plugs go?
will buy more. Then it will run out of power. Then they will buy even more reductions.
I call it genius marketing plan. Long live the Apple!
I thought these haven't even shipped yet.
Floppy like a dongle.
This program uses neuroevolutionary algorithms to learn how to play Flappy Bird and Asteroids. I hit over a million points last night with only 42 levels. Feel free to try it out for yourself
We had a good thread before
>>57438317
Anyways here are the links:
https://xviniette.github.io/FlappyLearning/
https://xviniette.github.io/AsteroidsLearning/
>>57471675
Absolutely Cool!
teach it how to play dota next
asteroids is missing the max score
Daily reminder to exclude all the countries which do not respect your freedoms (:
> Yuliya
>Tor
>respecting your freedom
>>57471400
Well, more than any browsers anyway..
Meme board edition.
>Buyer's template:
http://pastebin.com/33S1gVkG
>Where to Buy:
http://pastebin.com/8Yku80VL
>FAQs:
http://pastebin.com/M5w7QtKp
>Use the buyer's template
http://pastebin.com/33S1gVkG
>Keyset wiki
keypuller.com
Previous thread : >>57440707
only waiting for the stabilizers and then i'm good to go
>>57471206
What exactly is the point in soldering your own keyboard together? Seems to be a hassle getting decent parts.
>>57471221
It's not that hard unless you want a custom plate, case and/or pcb.
I'm still trying to figure out how to design a decent acrylic and alu sandwich case I can get cut so I can make the keyboard I really want.
/AG/ ANTERGOS/ARCH GENERAL
Why didn't anyone tell me antergos was so good?
>God tier package management
>AUR has literally everything even android studio
>Fastest distro I've ever used
>No graphical hiccups
>No fiddling with compton to get rid of screen tearing
>Stable
>The most useful community
>Easy install
>Rolling distro
Holy fuck this amazing
Post desktops, discuss your favorite packages, and post issues and solutions
i dont like pacman
Cause it's literally just an installer for arch
I'd like to but the installer shat the bed
What is this part for?
HDD
>>57469955
ask sqt, dumb phonebabby
There's probably some gubbins there that they couldn't fit behind the screen.
Why are their products so expensive?
Because there's enough people paying what they ask.
because pic related
>>57469907
Because their are some retards that think expensive = better.
>With Donald Trump now the President elect, all eyes in telecom have turned to what happens now in regards to FCC telecom enforcement generally, and our shiny new net neutrality rules specifically. Trump has proclaimed he opposes net neutrality, despite making it abundantly clear he doesn't appear to actually know what it is (he appears to falsely believe it has something to do with the fairness doctrine). As such most people believe he'll work to gut the current FCC, which as we've noted has, for the first time in arguably twenty years or so, actually been doing a few things to actually help broadband consumers and sector competition.
>Trump is said to have appointed Jeffrey Eisenach, "a crusader against regulation," who has consistently criticized current FCC boss Tom Wheeler, to handle his telecom transition team:
>>In 2012 Eisenach arrived as a fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute — and in that role, he’s been an outspoken antagonist of FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler and his policies. In his research and advocacy, often backed by tech and telecom interests, he's slammed the Obama administration's efforts on net neutrality, broadband investment and more.
>As such, any newly-configured FCC is more than a little likely to consist of the kind of revolving door regulators that either will move to strip back net neutrality protections (difficult but not impossible), or (potentially more likely) simply refuse to enforce them. ISPs are already making it clear they see an opportunity to role back "onerous FCC regulations" at the behest of giant ISPs -- likely in the form of a complete Communications Act rewrite courtesy of the Republican-controlled House and Senate.
>This enthusiasm includes former Congressman Rick Boucher, who at one point in time was a fantastic crusader for fair use rights, but has since made his living playing parrot for the telecom industry over at Sidley Austin, a law firm that effectively acts as an AT&T policy arm. Not wasting any time, an e-mail dropped into Techdirt's inbox this morning by the Internet Innovation Alliance (also part of AT&T's telecom policy efforts), featuring Boucher proclaiming that it was time to "return to the bi-partisan light regulatory oversight of broadband":
>>The first order of business for the new FCC should be a return to the bi-partisan light regulatory oversight of broadband launched during the Clinton administration. The decision to treat broadband as an information service unleashed a wave of investment in internet infrastructure that enabled our communications network to become the envy of the world. That progress has been undermined by the Commission's decision to treat broadband as a telecommunications service with regulatory requirements designed for the monopoly era of rotary telephones. Few regulatory changes would do more to promote investment and a stronger U.S. economy than a return to the time-honored light regulatory regime for broadband.
>If you're playing along at home and don't speak telecom sock-puppet, Boucher's effectively arguing Trump should back off the FCC's recent decision to reclassify ISPs as common carriers (which put the FCC on the proper legal footing to enforce net neutrality) and return to the FCC's earlier mantra of going out of its way to avoid doing much of anything that would hinder incumbent ISP profits. That's unfortunate, given that this was a period during which we pretended that if we let ISPs dictate all regulation they would magically deploy amazing new competitive broadband networks.
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20161109/10362936007/wake-trump-win-isps-are-already-laying-groundwork-gutting-net-neutrality.shtml
>>57468856
Serious question: When did we actually have neutrality because the last time I checked people were still still getting throttled and most ISP's had data caps. Is this supposed to be manufactured outrage at something which never came to fruition?
>>57468876
ITT: apps everyone should have
gentoo
>>57468306
Automate
Fdroid
Adaway
APKShare
>>57468306
/thread
Post em and r8
hello here is my cell phone desktop
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zIK1Vn6Va3w
Errmm... how do I make my android this cool?
fuck all that useless icon/widget, learn to type
Is it possible to write faster code using modern C++ with rval refs/lval refs/const args/std::moves/std::forwards/noexcept/std::future /std::async and everything else modern c++ has than plain old C?
C++ cannot be faster than C
>>57467634
Yeah whenever I'm writing C code i can actually see the ASM output in my mind, feelsgoodman
>>57467662
I love you.
Seriously though, C code might ((((ideally))) be lower resource heavy than C++ but practically speaking it always mean comparing bad C code to bad C++ code. Bad C code throws segway faults, bad C++ code catches errors with good exception handling.l
When was the last time you pressed this key?
An hour ago, so I guess it's been a bit.
when i was using my fat friend's thinkpad trying to press ctrl
Like 4 hours ago at work.
Debian is the FreeBSD of Linux. Are you running it?
Yes, on my libre x200. On my desktop I have arch, and my server has Ubuntu server.
>>57461855
I have installed it for longer than I have used it.
It might be stable for you, but I've never managed to use it for more than a week without breaking something.
I ran testing and then sid for several years. At the end of the day it was just quicker and easier to throw Ubuntu onto new machines.