anything in the archives about this problem. Alternatively, does
anyone know if Parallels 4 works with a current kernel? If so I'll
probably just upgrade to that; I've been holding off for a good reason
to.
Thanks,
—
Daniel Lyons
th) / BI2WD;
-
- hp += off;
- sp += off;
- esp = sp + Dy(r) * wid;
- while(sp < esp){
- memmove(hp, sp, w);
- hp += wid;
- sp += wid;
- }
- }
-
VGAdev vgavesadev = {
"vesa",
0,
vgavesa.c:174,178 - /n/sourcesdump/2008/1101/plan9/sys/src/9/pc/
vgavesa.c:140,145
0,
0,
0,
- vesaflush,
+ 0,
};
—
Daniel Lyons
ve a reputation for building the VM to support Windows first.
Again, thanks! Hopefully I'll be able to afford a copy of the new
version of Parallels in a little while and perhaps that will help
further isolate the problem.
—
Daniel Lyons
s are set up in vgavesa.c, my display is
unusable? Or is there a special way to bail out to the text mode when
the display is screwed up?
Thanks again,
—
Daniel Lyons
difference (sometimes bordering on
hate) towards their customers but it does seem to be the fastest Mac
Plan 9 emulator I've had success with so far. As I said before,
Windows is about their only interest, if that's is something you need
on your Mac.
—
Daniel Lyons
totype mismatch "IND ULONG" for "IND INT":
cpuid
devarch.c:869 function args not checked: mtrrprint
devarch.c:951 function args not checked: mtrr
mk: 8c -FTVw devarch.c : exit status=rc 1227: 8c 1229: error
I copied /n/sources/patch/saved/pat/*.[ch] to /sys/src/9/pc ... Wha
ystem, nor does reading from it produce
anything.
Any pointers on how to use this? Or is it defunct or some kind of dead
end?
Thanks,
—
Daniel Lyons
ke myself who are recent adopters of Plan 9 and don't have a
comprehensive understanding of the security architecture—perhaps
because we've been poisoned by systems like Mac OS X Keychain and SSH.
—
Daniel Lyons
On Aug 6, 2009, at 7:39 PM, Roman Shaposhnik wrote:
On Aug 6, 2009, at 12:33 PM, Daniel Lyons wrote:
It's easy for me to object to what they're coming up with but it
would be hard for me to describe in detail how exactly factotum +
all the other stuff encompass it, and I don
ution.
—
Daniel Lyons
really taking a position here but your comments reminded me of the
story. I guess there's always a bigger jerk out there and sometimes he
runs your colo facility.
—
Daniel Lyons
runs acme with -l lib/acme.dump, but you can
certainly have as many of these around as you'd like.
—
Daniel Lyons
useam. Outside
Plan 9 I don't see anyone solving two problems with one technology;
instead, they're just solving one problem and introducing a new one.
—
Daniel Lyons
On Aug 7, 2009, at 11:37 AM, ron minnich wrote:
On Fri, Aug 7, 2009 at 10:34 AM, Daniel
Lyons wrote:
My beef is that they were hot-all-over CORBA not too long ago. I
expect in
another three years nobody will be using D-Bus, they'll be using
some new
layer that sits on top of it.
it wholesale actually. I wouldn't be here if I weren't
interested in different paradigms and evaluating them.
--
Daniel Lyons
you do. I hope that in some time I will be doing
as much for the good as you and others on this list that carry the
Plan 9 torch and endure my stupid questions (and now my rants.)
—
Daniel Lyons
has on connection
setup, as well as silly optional features like connection sharing and
whatnot. (I use that silly feature all the time but I don't think I
would have offered to build it into the protocol.)
—
Daniel Lyons
(another)))
I bet you could set up Emacs to use a proportional font. It can do
anything, right? :)
I'd love it if Acme or Plan 9 had good support for some kind of Lisp
variant.
—
Daniel Lyons
On Aug 14, 2009, at 3:15 AM, Aaron W. Hsu wrote:
On Thu, 13 Aug 2009 13:58:39 -0400, Daniel Lyons > wrote:
I'd love it if Acme or Plan 9 had good support for some kind of
Lisp variant.
Maybe that should be my next side project.
If that's something you're thinking a
about it to me.
Another thing which would be cool would be something like scsh.
--
Daniel Lyons
On Aug 16, 2009, at 10:26 AM, Fernan Bolando wrote:
oops
seeing that I posted this blindly anybody can now gain access to my
files.
Is this true? I would have thought access to your Venti would be a
requisite too.
—
Daniel Lyons
d to think HP was a great brand, but it
really seems to have gone to hell in the last several years IMO. I
don't trust multifunction devices anyway.
—
Daniel Lyons
views; otherwise you will need application code to have
any abstractions at all.
—
Daniel Lyons
w
got to excellence by birth alone.
—
Daniel Lyons
pers, because they are the ones who make the
platform seem large and inviting to the customers. The more fun they
make programming, the more it helps their bottom line.
—
Daniel Lyons
cute that block in another
thread without having to do much thinking about it.
—
Daniel Lyons
hines would have become more common and taken
Lisp with them the way Unix brought C. There are simply too many
variables to lay the blame at Lisp's alleged functional basis.
Especially today when languages like Haskell exist that take
functional so much further they make Lisp look like a procedural
language by comparison.
—
Daniel Lyons
Eris,
Using your theories, please explain why Lisp and Plan 9 both hover
around the same level of popularity (i.e., not very, but not dead
either).
—
Daniel Lyons
On Sep 7, 2009, at 2:54 AM, Paul Donnelly wrote:
or perhaps A-list games programming
The Jak and Daxter series was written in Common Lisp.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_Oriented_Assembly_Lisp
—
Daniel Lyons
d
Plan 9 are in the same situation for exactly the same reason: they're
both conceptually rigorous and short on eye candy, and the market
chose other alternatives long ago, and now those alternatives define
the question in a way that precludes these answers.
—
Daniel Lyons
7;t
hardware or motivation, it's that by the time you teach someone to be
explicit enough that a computer can derive what they're trying to do,
you've made them a programmer already (see Prolog for example). Same
with strong AI: nobody has a clue how to word the problem precisely
enough to write a program to solve it.
—
Daniel Lyons
On Sep 17, 2009, at 2:43 AM, Charles Forsyth wrote:
opening their platform interfaces
Any in particular?
—
Daniel Lyons
On Sep 17, 2009, at 3:19 AM, Andrew Simmons wrote:
And no doubt we'd have been much better off if Apple had instead
spent the
time and effort making a decent iPod.
Um... what is it you dislike about the iPod?
—
Daniel Lyons
e the list is called "9fans" not "plan9-dev." Not
sure our community is large enough to survive being partitioned off
into little tiny segments.
—
Daniel Lyons
somewhere I can examine for messages I may not have seen,
or any other debugging information I can go looking for?
I'm downloading 9atom to compare tomorrow.
Thanks,
--
Daniel Lyons
messages I may not have
>> seen, or any other debugging information I can go looking for?
>
> /dev/kmesg will give you the console prints so far; /dev/kprint will wait for
> new ones (and prevent them going to your actual console).
I don't see anything interesting there, except that it couldn't initialize
usbd. Does usbd work for you?
—
Daniel Lyons
lient/plan9.db' does not exist
replica/compactdb /n/boot/dist/replica/client/plan9.db: compactdb 151:
opendb /n/boot/dist/replica/client/plan9.db:
'/n/boot/dist/replica/client/plan9.db' does not exist
pull 123: test 153: false
Advice?
--
Daniel Lyons
Thanks, all!
--
Daniel Lyons
io doesn't live long; you create a window and then get this:
invalid opcode f0 0f b1 at eip 00013f3b
invalid opcode f0 0f b1 at eip 00020dc2
And pretty much have to restart it. I'm going to try the other methods.
—
Daniel Lyons
On May 6, 2011, at 10:05 PM, erik quanstrom wrote:
> i should have mentioned this change was made on 18 mar.
Using the plan9.tar.bz2 proved more fruitful. Perhaps there's something
unsavory about the way Finder mounts ISOs.
—
Daniel Lyons
k...mount usbd...boot: can't open /srv/usb: '/srv/usb' file
does not exist
time...
fossil(#S/sdC0/fossil)...version...time...
can't stat /srv/parts.sdXX: '/srv/partfs.sdXX' file does not exist
init: starting /bin/rc
And that's it, nothing particularly interesting. What else can I do to debug
this?
Thanks,
—
Daniel Lyons
www.tuaw.com/files/stevesings.mp3
My pet theory is that it's the same reason people don't buy paper tablets that
weigh 5+ lbs and have with built-in typewriters. Of course, you can't discount
the possibility that there's a difference between a car and a horseless
carriage.
—
Daniel Lyons
peration would be nice, but I don't consider it
necessary.
Thanks,
--
Daniel Lyons
On May 10, 2011, at 2:34 AM, hiro wrote:
> 20$ for a juice? I thought the dollar was already pretty high these
> days? Seldom do I say this phrase but what the fuck!
He's talking about wine.
—
Daniel Lyons
ck with that either.
How are you guys using these tools?
--
Daniel Lyons
On Thu, May 12, 2011 at 01:30:00PM -0700, Bakul Shah wrote:
> On Thu, 12 May 2011 14:03:13 CDT Daniel Lyons wrote:
> > On Thu, May 12, 2011 at 11:52:30AM -0700, Bakul Shah wrote:
> > > On Thu, 12 May 2011 13:14:55 CDT Stanley Lieber
> > >
> > wrote:
> >
vx? It seems to work from
p9p, but not from 9vx. Every connection to my machine times out, but
sources works.
--
Daniel Lyons
can access sources without any trouble.
Anybody know what I'm missing, or have a good idea how to debug it?
Thanks,
—
Daniel Lyons
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