"Voters in Stockholm and London both initially opposed congestion pricing before and as the toll was introduced. But as the benefits of less traffic became immediately apparent, support for the toll shot up in both cities."
https://nyc.streetsblog.org/2025/03/10/siena-poll-support-for-congestion-pricing-keeps-rising
Interesting how sometimes new etiquette pops up
You can now jailbreak your AMD CPU! 🔥We've just released a full microcode toolchain, with source code and tutorials. https://bughunters.google.com/blog/5424842357473280/zen-and-the-art-of-microcode-hacking
Hey RISC-V folks! It'll be a 5th Gbg RISC-V meetup, co-located with the RISC-V in Space Workshop! Sign up here: https://www.meetup.com/goteborg-risc-v-group/events/306521257/
Announcing it on Mastodon before anywhere else:
We've just set up a Discord server for Patreon supporters at the Sergeant and Lieutenant levels. We're doing this slowly and might expand to other tiers as we see how it all works out.
Thanks for your support!
Best team ever. Come work on compilers and language features 😃 https://redhat.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/Jobs/job/Remote-US-NC/Platform-Tools---Principal-Software-Engineer---C---Tools---Automotive_R-042453-1
Many of us have now heard of Rust's "Graydon Hoare being upset at a broken embedded system in an elevator" origin story, but not many younger programmers know that C++ was invented by Bjarne Stroustrup after he forgot to null-terminate his legs while putting his shoes on one day and had to deal with the aftermath.
RISC-V and Fedora: All Aboard! (Fedora Magazine)
At least once a day I'm reminded of this slide from @bagder last year at FOSDEM
What would a TV ad promoting alternatives to driving look like? What if people who love cycling and progressive transportation reclaimed ideas like freedom, independence and even patriotism? We decided to give it a shot. Check out our new video, "America, It's Just Like Riding a Bike."
Very happy to announce my book The Linux Memory Manager is now available to pre-order at
https://nostarch.com/linux-memory-manager
It's a comprehensive 1,300 page exploration of how memory functions in Linux that goes into great depth on the subject, and is the first book of its kind for 20 years :)