Lunduke and Friends - May 16, 2020 - Part 2
Nerdy, Linux-y, quarantined fun. Modems! Open source! Paranoia! Huzzah!
View on LBRY & YouTube. Listen on the podcast. All right here: https://lunduke.com/posts/2020-05-20/
Lunduke and Friends - May 16, 2020 - Part 1
With: Gardiner Bryant, Chris Titus, Matt Hartley, and Lunduke.
YouTube, LBRY, and Podcast:
https://lunduke.com/posts/2020-05-18/
How long does a loop last?
Read at The Lunduke Journal: https://lunduke.com/posts/2020-05-14/
And on LBRY: https://open.lbry.com/@Lunduke:e/2020-05-14-WhileLoop:a
How long does a loop last?
Read at The Lunduke Journal: https://lunduke.com/posts/2020-05-14/
And on LBRY: https://open.lbry.com/@Lunduke:e/2020-05-14-WhileLoop:a
Playing around with publishing non-Video content to @lbry.
Yesterday published a comic strip. So far, earned $21 in tips in the first 20 hours.
Fascinating. This shows real promise as a comic platform.
1st Comic: https://open.lbry.com/@Lunduke:e/2020-05-11-KnockKnock:3
2nd Comic: https://open.lbry.com/@Lunduke:e/2020-05-12-UDP:9
Lunduke and Friends - May 9, 2020 - Part 1.
With Nerdy Guests: Wendell Wilson (Level 1 Techs), Chris Titus (Chris Titus Tech), and Matt Hartley (Veteran Tech Journalist).
Podcast RSS Feed: https://lunduke.com/
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FBEZsrefuu0
LBRY: https://open.lbry.com/@Lunduke:e/lunduke-and-friends-may-9-2020-part-1:5
You may have heard reports that Linux marketshare doubled last month.
That's likely not true.
Not only that... Linux marketshare is down significantly over the last few years.
Full report:
https://lunduke.com/posts/2020-05-08-b/
It's time for a new Netiquette document. One aimed at providing a clear, easy to understand (and reference) set of guidelines for the systems that are utilized on today's Internet.
The Netiquette 2020 Project.
Why are computer programmers always getting Halloween confused with Christmas?
Because Oct 31 equals Dec 25.
Today in Computer History - May 6, 1949:
The EDSAC ran its first program.
Cool things about the EDSAC:
- 1st computer to have sub-routines.
- 1st computer (possibly) with a video game.
- Ran at 650 instructions per second.