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11 results for “abergmeier”

  1. Am I doing it wrong or is dbus_interface in basically forcing me to leak references?
    Tried structs with lifetimes but it seems like dbus_interface always forces the struct field lifetime to 'static.

  2. @rhgrouls @sanchayan Day 2 of using . A lot to like - but some shortcomings.
    Hope they are open to extend the current functionality.

  3. seems amazing. Will give it a shot.
    For years now I have been using git-gui. Since tcl does not integrate great with my Desktop, pure terminal solution might work better.
    Extending git-gui with their obscure language never seemed possible. With rust sky might be the limit.

    RT @rhgrouls
    "lately, I have been using gitui, built in . I set up a toggleterm + gitui keymap in , but I also like to use it outside of neovim. github.com/extrawurst/gitui"

    CC @sanchayan

  4. @train I know it is useful for ~3 things.
    1. Defining quirks for ALSA
    2. Defining quirks for Hid/++
    3. Exposing highly semantic interfaces to userspace.

    For these former two, #ePBF brings benefits by allowing userspace to quickly iterate over necessary fixes. Also there is a good chance you can then backport fixes easily to LTS.
    For the latter exposing interfaces via ioctl or sysfs is cumbersome in highly semantic scenarios. Here #eBPF could make sense as long as latency, etc. is not a concern.

  5. @train I know it is useful for ~3 things.
    1. Defining quirks for ALSA
    2. Defining quirks for Hid/++
    3. Exposing highly semantic interfaces to userspace.

    For these former two, #ePBF brings benefits by allowing userspace to quickly iterate over necessary fixes. Also there is a good chance you can then backport fixes easily to LTS.
    For the latter exposing interfaces via ioctl or sysfs is cumbersome in highly semantic scenarios. Here #eBPF could make sense as long as latency, etc. is not a concern.

  6. @train I know it is useful for ~3 things.
    1. Defining quirks for ALSA
    2. Defining quirks for Hid/++
    3. Exposing highly semantic interfaces to userspace.

    For these former two, brings benefits by allowing userspace to quickly iterate over necessary fixes. Also there is a good chance you can then backport fixes easily to LTS.
    For the latter exposing interfaces via ioctl or sysfs is cumbersome in highly semantic scenarios. Here could make sense as long as latency, etc. is not a concern.

  7. @train I know it is useful for ~3 things.
    1. Defining quirks for ALSA
    2. Defining quirks for Hid/++
    3. Exposing highly semantic interfaces to userspace.

    For these former two, #ePBF brings benefits by allowing userspace to quickly iterate over necessary fixes. Also there is a good chance you can then backport fixes easily to LTS.
    For the latter exposing interfaces via ioctl or sysfs is cumbersome in highly semantic scenarios. Here #eBPF could make sense as long as latency, etc. is not a concern.

  8. @train I know it is useful for ~3 things.
    1. Defining quirks for ALSA
    2. Defining quirks for Hid/++
    3. Exposing highly semantic interfaces to userspace.

    For these former two, #ePBF brings benefits by allowing userspace to quickly iterate over necessary fixes. Also there is a good chance you can then backport fixes easily to LTS.
    For the latter exposing interfaces via ioctl or sysfs is cumbersome in highly semantic scenarios. Here #eBPF could make sense as long as latency, etc. is not a concern.

  9. @dragnucs Difficult and embarassing topic.
    I wrote prototypes for Terraform Providers for #podman, #buildah and #kaniko IIRC.
    ALL of them are horrible at caching layers - let alone remote exec.
    The only descend approach which supports caching seems to be #buildx + #buildkit. And yes, I have a prototype implementation for that as well.
    We are still not testing this though, since hosting a Buildkit Remote Builder on GKE is a nightmare.
    Let alone error handling in both buildx and buildkit is BAD.

  10. 🗓️ 14:30 Uhr

    Vorstellung der #CreativesForFuture-Deutschland

    Eröffnung Online-Vorträge und ihr könnt uns Fragen stellen und Anregungen einbringen. 

    mit Stefan Bergmeier @stefanb (C4F) und @sustotto ( #C4F, #SDC, #AGD)

  11. Die Beiträge der Reihe »Klimascheinlösungen« von Creatives For Future wurden im Rahmen der Werkwoche an der Hochschule Augsburg in der Fakultät Gestaltung von Studierenden mit den Gastdozenten Agnes Wartner von www.kepler-studio.de und Stefan Bergmeier von @creatives for future und www.neueformation.com erarbeitet. Sie basieren auf den Informationen von www.klimascheinloesungen.de. Vielen Dank an Prof. Stefan Bufler für die Einladung.

    #klimascheinlösungen #CreativesForFuture #Scheinlösung