Say what you will about Blades but the art directive was beautiful, it's such a shame we never saw Dwemer ruins implemented
Such a short and simple example of how elegant and black box Forth is.
Forwarded from ilo sona
Forth is incredible. In 300 lines of code, I am able to make a RISC-V32I assembler and use it to boot into OpenSBI with Qemu. Not to mention, a significant amount of those 300 lines are data definitions like register names and instruction definitions. The core of the assembler—the infrastructure for encoding and decoding instructions, and dumping them into a binary file—took a surprisingly small amount of effort. Whether this speaks to the strengths of FORTH or RISC-V is not a question as I tried to do the same thing in C and I had gotten to about a thousand lines and am still writing a parser. Even then, if i had completed it, it would be a much less powerful assember as compared to the one you see in the screenshot above which is an assembler written as a forth DSL, giving you all the power of forth to write your assembly.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forth_(programming_language)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RISC-V
https://github.com/riscv-software-src/opensbi
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forth_(programming_language)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RISC-V
https://github.com/riscv-software-src/opensbi
❤🔥1
"Microsoft's engineer wants to "eliminate every line of C and C++ from Microsoft by 2030" by combining AI and algorithms "to rewrite Microsoft’s largest codebases."
But don't worry – he is not revamping Windows, just building tech to make migration from language to language possible"
This is why you don't let the sales department dictate the product direction. Dumbest shit I've ever heard in my life lol
But don't worry – he is not revamping Windows, just building tech to make migration from language to language possible"
This is why you don't let the sales department dictate the product direction. Dumbest shit I've ever heard in my life lol
This is very bad news.
A data center in Morrow County, eastern Oregon, has been linked by local officials and residents to a surge in rare cancers, miscarriages, and serious organ damage.
Former county commissioner and cattle rancher Jim Doherty began investigating after noticing unusual medical conditions across the county’s roughly 45,000 residents. Testing of 70 household wells found that 68 exceeded federal nitrate limits in drinking water, with Doherty reporting multiple miscarriages, kidney removals, and a non‑smoker who developed a cancer typically associated with smoking. Initially blamed on industrial megafarms, the pollution was later tied to the combined impact of agricultural runoff and wastewater from Amazon’s 10,000‑square‑foot data center, which has operated in the county since 2011. The facility, which relies heavily on groundwater for cooling, is accused of intensifying nitrate contamination throughout the local aquifer.
According to the reporting, megafarms in the area generate millions of gallons of nitrate‑laden wastewater that seep into the ground, while Amazon’s massive water use for chip cooling is said to “supercharge” the problem by drawing in contaminated groundwater, concentrating it through evaporation, and returning even more toxic water back into the system. In some cases, water from the data center reportedly contained nitrate levels eight times above Oregon’s safety threshold. Amazon denies that its operations have any meaningful impact on water quality, emphasizing that it does not add nitrates and uses only a small fraction of the overall water supply. However, residents and activists, including Oregon Rural Action executive director Kristin Ostrom, compare the slow and unequal response to the crisis to Flint, Michigan, arguing that politically and economically powerless communities are bearing the brunt of the health consequences.
References (APA style)
Wilkins, J. (2025, November 29). *Amazon data center linked to cluster of rare cancers*. Futurism.
A data center in Morrow County, eastern Oregon, has been linked by local officials and residents to a surge in rare cancers, miscarriages, and serious organ damage.
Former county commissioner and cattle rancher Jim Doherty began investigating after noticing unusual medical conditions across the county’s roughly 45,000 residents. Testing of 70 household wells found that 68 exceeded federal nitrate limits in drinking water, with Doherty reporting multiple miscarriages, kidney removals, and a non‑smoker who developed a cancer typically associated with smoking. Initially blamed on industrial megafarms, the pollution was later tied to the combined impact of agricultural runoff and wastewater from Amazon’s 10,000‑square‑foot data center, which has operated in the county since 2011. The facility, which relies heavily on groundwater for cooling, is accused of intensifying nitrate contamination throughout the local aquifer.
According to the reporting, megafarms in the area generate millions of gallons of nitrate‑laden wastewater that seep into the ground, while Amazon’s massive water use for chip cooling is said to “supercharge” the problem by drawing in contaminated groundwater, concentrating it through evaporation, and returning even more toxic water back into the system. In some cases, water from the data center reportedly contained nitrate levels eight times above Oregon’s safety threshold. Amazon denies that its operations have any meaningful impact on water quality, emphasizing that it does not add nitrates and uses only a small fraction of the overall water supply. However, residents and activists, including Oregon Rural Action executive director Kristin Ostrom, compare the slow and unequal response to the crisis to Flint, Michigan, arguing that politically and economically powerless communities are bearing the brunt of the health consequences.
References (APA style)
Wilkins, J. (2025, November 29). *Amazon data center linked to cluster of rare cancers*. Futurism.
DUI
$10,000 +
Funeral
$15,000 +
Uber
$25
Be smart tonight
ALSO protip, a lot of towing companies right now are offering free rides where they drive u and ur car home. Check ur local area or just be smart and only drink alcohol at home and not in amounts high enough to become severely impaired🧑🌾
$10,000 +
Funeral
$15,000 +
Uber
$25
Be smart tonight
ALSO protip, a lot of towing companies right now are offering free rides where they drive u and ur car home. Check ur local area or just be smart and only drink alcohol at home and not in amounts high enough to become severely impaired
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I hate when people ask me what I did 6 years ago.
Look, it's not like I have 2020 vision
BAHAHHA HAHAHA
Look, it's not like I have 2020 vision
BAHAHHA HAHAHA