They’re not compatible
This is what concerns me. ARM could dominate the market because almost everyone would develop apps supporting it and leave RISC-V behind. It could become like Itanium vs AMD64 all over again.
They’re not compatible
This is what concerns me. ARM could dominate the market because almost everyone would develop apps supporting it and leave RISC-V behind. It could become like Itanium vs AMD64 all over again.
I’d rather see what RISC-V has to offer.
I wish we held game developers to the same level of scrutiny.
Working in enterprise software development really hammers in the importance of unit tests and integration tests.
WE MARCH FOR MACRAGGE
I doubt there are general tips and tricks given the vast nature of the Linux ecosystem.
Perhaps you should phrase your questions as “How do I do X?” to get more specific help.
But Gnome devs are notoriously hard to work with.
I shared a green text recently that said just this lol
As for why they adopted KDE, they probably discovered how hard it is to work with Gnome developers.
A lot of what you said are just personal opinions.
Can someone translate that text?
“never break userspace”
As Linus once, very articulately, reminded that one guy.
I used to check up the progress on the openjdk website. They have regular meetings and the minutes of meeting were recorded. Also, there are regular updates on the github repo.
I am also now looking forward to Project Leyden and Galahad to produce some results.
I’m the Kath-man.
If only I could get some spice.
substack
Ignored.
That doesn’t look right. But I haven’t tried 4.0 yet. Let me check.
It greatly depends on the applications.
Porting Windows exclusive games to Linux is a small step as well, but most developers don’t do it because they cannot justify the additional QA and debugging time required to port them over. Especially since Linux’s market share is small.
The reason Itanium failed was because the architecture was too different from x86 and porting x86 applications over required significant effort and was error prone.
For RISC-V to even get any serious attention from developers, I think they need to have appx 40-50% market share with OEMs alongside ARM. Otherwise, RISC-V will be seen as a niche architecture and developers would avoid porting their applications to it.