After spending far too much personal time this weekend playing with a little arm64 soc that is supposedly fully supported upstream, I'm thinking there would be a lot of value in a tool that would take a dtb file and give you a kernel config that had all the drivers needed enabled.
The device/bus topologies and dependencies on SoCs are really complex, and hunting down one by one what random driver is missing that is preventing some other driver to load can be a real time sink when just trying to get a kernel running. And starting from an old BSP config doesn't help much as the upstream drivers may be renamed or under a different config.
But it seems like having supported dtb compat strings in the CONFIG setting in the Kconfig files might be helpful to generate this.
Housemate:
"The existence of http and https implies the existence of http3, http: Resurrection, and http vs. Predator.
Discuss."
This is some deeply weird and troubling shit. #GenAI
Agent Psychosis: Are We Going Insane? | Armin Ronacher's Thoughts and Writings
https://lucumr.pocoo.org/2026/1/18/agent-psychosis/
Dear FOSS Community 👋,
I’m researching Open Source funds and support programs that directly pay FOSS maintainers or contributors (not just offering mentorship), similar to the Fellowship program by @sovtechfund
I’m especially looking for programs that:
- are aimed at FOSS maintainers or contributors (not only students),
- focus on paid support and
- offer funding for at least 3 months.
If you know of any funds, organizations, or initiatives like this, please comment (or boost). Thanks :)
cool, so there's a whole new github dork people can do: claude chatlogs.
they live in .claude/logs/ and are full text records of peoples entire conversations with claude
and they're ending up in public on github because i guess people arent adding them to .gitignore
happy monday! ai is going great!
A thought that popped into my head when I woke up at 4 am and couldn’t get back to sleep…
Imagine that AI/LLM tools were being marketed to workers as a way to do the same work more quickly and work fewer hours without telling their employers.
“Use ChatGPT to write your TPS reports, go home at lunchtime. Spend more time with your kids!” “Use Claude to write your code, turn 60-hour weeks into four-day weekends!” “Collect two paychecks by using AI! You can hold two jobs without the boss knowing the difference!”
Imagine if AI/LLM tools were not shareholder catnip, but a grassroots movement of tooling that workers were sharing with each other to work less. Same quality of output, but instead of being pushed top-down, being adopted to empower people to work less and “cheat” employers.
Imagine if unions were arguing for the right of workers to use LLMs as labor saving devices, instead of trying to protect members from their damage.
CEOs would be screaming bloody murder. There’d be an overnight industry in AI-detection tools and immediate bans on AI in the workplace. Instead of Microsoft CoPilot 365, Satya would be out promoting Microsoft SlopGuard - add ons that detect LLM tools running on Windows and prevent AI scrapers from harvesting your company’s valuable content for training.
The media would be running horror stories about the terrible trend of workers getting the same pay for working less, and the awful quality of LLM output. Maybe they’d still call them “hallucinations,” but it’d be in the terrified tone of 80s anti-drug PSAs.
What I’m trying to say in my sleep-deprived state is that you shouldn’t ignore the intent and ill effects of these tools. If they were good for you, shareholders would hate them.
You should understand that they’re anti-worker and anti-human. TPTB would be fighting them tooth and nail if their benefits were reversed. It doesn’t matter how good they get, or how interesting they are: the ultimate purpose of the industry behind them is to create less demand for labor and aggregate more wealth in fewer hands.
Unless you happen to be in a very very small club of ultra-wealthy tech bros, they’re not for you, they’re against you. #AI #LLMs #claude #chatgpt
I need an engineer who hates company politics as much as I do. I’m the Head of Network and Infrastructure at Inter.link. We’re 30 people disrupting the European IP market. We’re lean, we’re green, and we have zero time for "corporate theater."
The Role: Build a better, faster, more sustainable Internet.
The Requirements: A "get-it-done" mindset.
The Vibe: Write good code. Help the customer. Go home happy.
https://inter.link/about-interlink/careers/senior-software-network-engineer-m-f-d/
eBPF.party – Learn eBPF through hands-on exercises. Write, compile, and run programs directly in your browser:
Dev of Steam game 'Hardest' will delete it after new girlfriend made them realize AI is bad https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2026/01/dev-of-steam-game-hardest-will-delete-it-after-new-girlfriend-made-them-realize-ai-is-bad/
I think the appearance of free software really broke the oligarch's brains. People are just giving away stuff that should be Shareholder Value? And we *can't* buy it off them and own it? People are just running a compiler whenever they like to make whatever they want without paying anyone?
The push to adopt LLM-powered code generation tools is so frenzied and desperate partly because it's a perceived solution to claw back ownership of the means of production into the Right Hands.
The Invention of Anarchism -
https://existentialcomics.com/comic/637
"Have you considered going commercial yet!?!?!?" Yes and it is a bad idea. Here is why it is actually really hard to give money and support most FOSS projects. In a blogpost rant.
This is probably my second to last blog in that improptu serie about Hobbyists Maintainers, slowly reaching its conclusion of a model of Hobbyists Maintainers situation and how we can actually help them.
Because believe it or not, I know how to say something else than "no" or "it will not work".
@jannem @neil Speaking of nohup'ing individual processes...
It's not the solution _here_, but if you've got a one-off job that you want to run and not have interrupted if your session drops, you can also tell systemd to run it
systemd-run [arbitrary command]
It'll essentially create an ephemeral unit for it, logging output to the journal and keeping it running even if your session dies.
Handy if tmux isn't/can't be installed
"Windows users keep losing files to OneDrive, and many don't know why | TechSpot"
Jeg opdagede forleden at min fars filer var flyttet til onedrive. Jeg troede at han havde godkendt et eller andet. Men nej, det har Microsoft gjort uden at spørge. Vi er enige om at det er tid til at flytte til linux.
Jeg fatter ikke hvordan I der bruger Windows, kan finde rundt og finder jer i at blive behandlet på den måde af Microsoft.
https://www.techspot.com/news/110848-onedrive-backup-feature-making-users-local-files-seemingly.html