/lib/rob, lib/rsc: more
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@ -98,3 +98,24 @@ If it's just between you and your server, go for it.
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I'd really like someone to clean the mess up (hint, hint).
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Hell has nothing to do with it.
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False.
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I think you misrepresent the purpose of security. Its role is to prevent us getting work done.
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So the rule of security is the following: if you are able to work on something other than security, your system is insecure.
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Those days [of "one tool doing one job well"] are dead and gone and the eulogy was delivered by Perl.
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I'll alert the media.
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Unix never says `please.'
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The secretaries don't understand me.
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Sometimes when you fill a vacuum, it still sucks.
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If you think awk is the perfect programming language for the problem, you don't understand the problem yet.
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There's no such thing as a simple cache bug.
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A great deal of agonizing and very little decisiveness went into resolving this issue
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Caches aren't architecture, they're just optimization.
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People admire complexity.
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Bite my shiny metal ass.
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iOS4.3 lets you decide whether the side switch is mute or rotate lock. Operating system innovations never cease.
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If you can't do something right, sometimes it's not worth doing at all.
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Once idea that comes to mind is to show us a reproducible example.
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The API has indeed changed.
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I suppose the documentation should mention this.
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I'm a radical here, but I think if a machine is paging, you've lost.
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So again, why?
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I guess I'm dim.
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@ -36,3 +36,25 @@ that was me.
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if you're going to do something about it, great.
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I think.
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Some extra work is required.
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that's a bigger job than you might think.
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We can fix the code, probably.
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This is misleading.
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it took me just as long to install the windows software as it did to write the plan 9 software.
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All things being equal, maybe I'd like there to be more Plan 9 users.
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Sorry, I don't think there's much we can do.
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The bikeshed has already been painted, and the painter has gone.
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Being stuck using Solaris makes being stuck using Linux look like a birthday party.
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also, plan9front claims to include a working go compiler. what did they do?
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I don't think we'd scale to a thousand nodes very well.
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Buh?
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Feature lists are great, but don't forget that there's always an implementation cost.
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Sorry, no luck.
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Now, now, be fair.
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I wish...
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We tried that.
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Dude, wake up!
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Looks like a bug to me.
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You think Windows runs in polynomial time?
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Also, backups are good.
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if you want something in particular, you could always port it.
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Suppose you subscribe to the Kernighan & Plauger thesis that programs should be clear.
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