Yeah, I saw that and it made me chuckle, especially once I discovered the
recursive reflection.
It's reasonably easy to program in it. I know that it can handle 16 bit 44.1
kHz stereo pcm streaming over a network. Does that it "performing?"
Chris
>
> Reading the description of the go-p9p, it
Reading the description of the go-p9p, it says "A modern, performant 9P
library for Go.". I'm guessing "modern" refers to being implemented in
Go. Any pointers on how performance was measured or what it was measured
against?
On Tue, Oct 18, 2016 at 11:32 AM Chris McGee wrote:
> If you're int
hi all,
just interested, anyone looked at the sw gui front end to ampl,
it is roughly a rio window (9term) for win32.
most interesting with rc on the back end i would think.
http://www.netlib.org/ampl/student/mswin/readme.sw
-Steve
If you're interested in Go, this 9p library has worked reasonably well for my
servers.
https://github.com/docker/go-p9p
> On Oct 18, 2016, at 1:31 PM, Iruatã Souza wrote:
>
> https://github.com/iru-/lua9p
>
>> On Thu, Oct 13, 2016 at 3:47 PM, yy wrote:
>>> On 13 October 2016 at 18:03, Steve
https://github.com/iru-/lua9p
On Thu, Oct 13, 2016 at 3:47 PM, yy wrote:
> On 13 October 2016 at 18:03, Steve Simon wrote:
>> Anyone written or ported a small simple 9p library;
>
> As part of a GSoC project I wrote
> https://bitbucket.org/yiyus/devwsys-prev/src/tip/libninep/ (man pages
> can be
Good point, thank you. The reason I keep talking about the RPi
is that I know it's (mostly) supported and I can buy it from a reseller
that I (mostly) trust. :)
I was looking at putting together a system for a file server, and I've
come to the conclusion that I'll have to build it myself, based o
I'm seeing that the PI is getting lot's of attention here on 9fans.
I use a Fujitsu thin client as terminal. These (and other vendors) can
be bought on ebay extremly cheaply (half the price of a PI or cheaper),
have nice case, Gigabit ethernet, enough USB ports, decent cpu power,
replaceable and u