Yeah, they have been working on taking over the community of various open source projects. I use NixOS and there has been a lot of drama lately where leftists pushed the founder to step down from the board. They want to add a permanent seat to the foundation board for "marginalized" people.. (people who have always been welcome to take part!). They are pushing DEI. Barf.
It's concerning, because Linux is the backbone of the internet as well as the "internet of things" ie devices. I get the feeling that these events are coordinated.
I'll stick with it though, because I like having full control of my system. Windows and Mac are not an option for me.
I've been using Linux for about a dozen years now. It was frustrating as heck at first, I started with Fedora. lol Now on Ubuntu, since I got tired of USB devices randomly not working on Debian.
Not much - it's the counter-up on Linux/UNIX computer systems that gives you an absolute time stamp. The only other thing to note is in 32bit systems it overflows 03:14:07 UTC on 19 January 2038 causing a possible error like the millennium bug.
For the non-computer programming types, computers trying to count time (seconds/hours/days/months/years) have to use special algorithms to count in "computereese"(like clock cycles or other means). It varies according to hardware & software, and the timing clocks need a starting point as part of the conversion (like 1/1/1970 for example). Early on, they could only count so high without running out of "bits" (digits) before they'd have what's called a stack overflow. This would impact databases and other items doing calculations adversely (think Y2k and divide by zero errors)...
I know you’re joking, but you will frequently see Porsche 911s in movies to this day. Watch out for them. It’s the whole 911 thing. Some believe Jesus to have been born on 9/11 and much more.
This takes date fagging to a whole new level . . .
u/#MindBlown
This place ..🤣
kek kek
kek kek
a Linux level!
yeah!
Great find.
Not to mention the Q clock.
That's happening today : 1717171717 - Linux epoch time (in seconds) since 1970/01/01
Good to see a fellow Linux pede. Most people in this industry are weak minded soy leftists. Vastly so.
Too many trannys in the Linux space. I love Linux, hate the cucked community.
Yeah, they have been working on taking over the community of various open source projects. I use NixOS and there has been a lot of drama lately where leftists pushed the founder to step down from the board. They want to add a permanent seat to the foundation board for "marginalized" people.. (people who have always been welcome to take part!). They are pushing DEI. Barf.
It's concerning, because Linux is the backbone of the internet as well as the "internet of things" ie devices. I get the feeling that these events are coordinated.
I'll stick with it though, because I like having full control of my system. Windows and Mac are not an option for me.
That might explain the overtly paedo symbolism on anything Debian or OpenSUSE.
Lots of commie symbology, too.
What's with Linux and its socialist/ commie tendencies?
I love using Linux, but I never understood why the connection.......
MX linux lad here
before that endeavour os -- latest had severe scheduling issues had to switch
I've been using Linux for about a dozen years now. It was frustrating as heck at first, I started with Fedora. lol Now on Ubuntu, since I got tired of USB devices randomly not working on Debian.
https://www.epochconverter.com/clock
watch it roll around in the next hour or so.... and maybe something will surprise us?
I musta justa missed it. Did we died?
$ date +%s
1717183726
What does it mean?
Not much - it's the counter-up on Linux/UNIX computer systems that gives you an absolute time stamp. The only other thing to note is in 32bit systems it overflows 03:14:07 UTC on 19 January 2038 causing a possible error like the millennium bug.
I knew about the 2038 bug, so that's why I was wondering if this was something similar I hadn't heard of. Thanks
I use Arch btw
So did anyone get a screenshot? I noticed this yesterday and posted it but was busy and didn't get a screenshot at 1717171717
https://media.gab.com/cdn-cgi/image/width=681.6,quality=100,fit=scale-down/system/media_attachments/files/162/064/792/original/0072e7c172821e9c.png
Hey fren I'm a little confused what all this is saying. Can you dumb it down for a fren
God bless
As u/Fatality stated, it is the number of non-leap seconds since January 1st 1970 at 00:00:00 UTC.
For the non-computer programming types, computers trying to count time (seconds/hours/days/months/years) have to use special algorithms to count in "computereese"(like clock cycles or other means). It varies according to hardware & software, and the timing clocks need a starting point as part of the conversion (like 1/1/1970 for example). Early on, they could only count so high without running out of "bits" (digits) before they'd have what's called a stack overflow. This would impact databases and other items doing calculations adversely (think Y2k and divide by zero errors)...
Thats becausr its not saying anything
Linux must be adopting the original Unix time clock.
I don't think Linux was even around til the 90's, maybe Im wrong. But it was definitely not around in 1970.
Only way to go with Linux Mint!
I know you’re joking, but you will frequently see Porsche 911s in movies to this day. Watch out for them. It’s the whole 911 thing. Some believe Jesus to have been born on 9/11 and much more.
https://www.youtube.com/@LXXXVIIIfinistemporis
If Jesus was born on 9/11 that would be interesting.. we dial 9 1 1 when we need help...