@atomicpoet Tonight I was playing The Confidential Killings (recently released on Steam) and thought of you and your periodic game reviews. https://www.imbrane.com/confidential-killings/
arclight@oldbytes.space
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@atomicpoet Tonight I was playing The Confidential Killings (recently released on Steam) and thought of you and your periodic game reviews. -
In the early days of personal computing CPU bugs were so rare as to be newsworthy.@gabrielesvelto Thank you for this detailed and specific explanation. Chris Hobbs discusses the relative unreliability of popular modern CPUs in "Embedded Systems Development for Safety-Critical Systems" but not to this depth.
I don't do embedded work but I do safety-related software QA. Our process has three types of test - acceptance tests which determine fitness-for-use, installation tests to ensure the system is in proper working order, and in-service tests which are sort of a mystery. There's no real guidance on what an in-service test is or how it differs from an installation test. Those are typically run when the operating system is updated or there are similar changes to support software. Given the issue of CPU degradation, I wonder if it makes sense to periodically run in-service tests or somehow detect CPU degradation (that's probably something that should be owned by the infrastructure people vs the application people).
I've mainly thought of CPU failures as design or manufacturing defects, not in terms of "wear" so this has me questioning the assumptions our testing is based on.
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Free speech is when you let people say controversial things. -
My son has the best History/Social Studies teacher.@AngelaPreston Let's put a big beefy arm on there for good measure... #ThatchedRoofCottages
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@mekkaokereke I want to thank you for giving me the insight and motivation to read US history a little deeper.@mekkaokereke I want to thank you for giving me the insight and motivation to read US history a little deeper. It's only Wikipedia but still the information seems to be valid and it's right there to be read.
I was reading up on the Boston Massacre of 1770 in which cops escalated a verbal altercation to violence culminating in the cops shooting and killing three citizens.
I won't go through the whole story, but I wanted to share a couple interesting details. Possibly the name most associated with the Boston Massacre is Crispus Attucks, a black man of mixed African and Indigenous descent. He's arguably the first man killed in the US Revolutionary War.
I knew his name and significance from childhood but I always found it interesting he was named so formally. His sister called him "Cris" which seems more humanizing (I think her quote was that if they hadn't killed Cris, he would've killed them). He's been described as a sailor, whaler, or stevedore - basically, a buff and burly black man of the docks - so probably a serious match for British troops harassing the locals.
Cris didn't pick this fight. Some young apprentice yelled at the group of soldiers telling their officer to pay what he owed to the lad's master. So everything started out with "mouthy teen yells at cops". Cris arrived later after one of the soldiers hit the mouthy teen with his musket, attracting a crowd of angry locals.
So gunfire, dead locals, and a huge political situation nobody wants.
To diffuse the situation, the cops need to be put on trial and it has to be a fair one. Gunning down locals without cause is a hanging offense.
Enter John Adams, known mainly as second president of the soon-to-be United States but at this point, a prominent Boston attorney. Adams will act as the defense attorney for the cops.
Guess what Adams' defense strategy is?
You likely already know the answer. I didn't but it's predictable to anyone paying attention since *waves arms* I DON'T KNOW - FOREVER?
Yes, it's the timeless "OMG I WAS SCARED SHITLESS BY A SCARY BLACK MAN!!1!" defense. Older than America itself.
Charges were limited to 3 enlisted soldiers, murder charges were reduced to manslaughter, and they were convicted. Mercy was called for as the cops were all first offenders, so the punishment was reduced to branding on the thumb and being shipped back to England vs being hanged by the neck until dead. Charges were filed against members of the crowd but were dropped due to perjury by the alleged eyewitness.
So that's your American history in a nutshell. Mouthy teens, unhinged violent cops murdering black men, the OMG SCARY BLACK MAN defense, lying in court, cops walking on murder charges or getting a slap on the wrist, and lionizing their enablers by electing them to high office. Dyed into the fabric of the nation, older than America itself.
Anyway, thanks for explaining what a shitheel Francis Scott Key was.