Or just don’t connect your phone to it. That’s what I do. I’ve never touched the “smart” screen in my car except to adjust the air conditioner.
Or just don’t connect your phone to it. That’s what I do. I’ve never touched the “smart” screen in my car except to adjust the air conditioner.
I hate that logo. I glanced at the subject and thought the X Window System was standardizing remote audio over the X protocol.
I don’t believe so - the docs mention several ways to boot a pi but most only work for newer models.
An option might be to boot an SD card read-only and run everything over NFS. It’s trivial to do that sort of thing with some UNIX clones (OpenBSD, for instance), but I don’t know about a modern Linux.
It might be too outdated to do major services, but it’s still fine for its original use - interfacing with electronic components.
You could build a weather station, monitor temperature and humidity in your attic and crawlspace, automatically water plants, etc. You don’t need much electronics knowledge for that sort of thing.
If I remember right, it was sponsored by DARPA. It was in the early 80s, so it would have been on VAX. It wasn’t the first implementation (there were several prototypes), but it’s the design that stuck; all the major OS implementations of TCP/IP today use the sockets API (if not the source code directly; several identical network vulnerabilities on different OSs are due to the fact that BSD code was free to use and copy).
Ah, DEC. Some really cool stuff came out of Maynard, MA.
A few notable things about DEC:
Oh, you know he’ll try to find a way to be president for life. And half the media will support it.
Honestly, the cat photos are just a bonus.
“Cross compiler” usually means a compiler that generates machine code for a machine other than what it runs on. For example, a compiler that runs on X86_64 but creates binaries for Atmel microcontrollers.
You might be thinking of transpilers, which produce source code in a different language. The f2c Fortran-to-C compiler is an example of that.
In my experience, transpiler output is practically unusable to a human reader. I’m guessing (I haven’t read the article) that IBM is using AI to convert COBOL to readable, maintainable Java. If it can do so without errors, that’s a big deal for mainframe users.
I paid for a car that I could drive halfway across the country in and be comfortable,not spend a fortune on fuel, and not worry too much about it stranding me on the side of the road. The smart screen just happened to come with it. So it seems to have worked out fine for me.
Are you naturally an asshole or are you making a special effort here?