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It's on the Macintosh Garden: https://macintoshgarden.org/apps/macbasic-10


Playstation 3, Playstation 4, and the Playstation Vita all make use of the FreeBSD kernel.

Playstation 5 seems to be a bit different. I'm a little confused if its running the FreeBSD kernel as the main OS/Kernel or if its being run as a shim for backwards compatibility with the PS4.

Its fun to see where BSD has ended up.


That last line reminds me of the old "Drink Verification Can" copypasta: https://imgur.com/dgGvgKF


I previously used CreditKarma for prior years taxes. This year I didn't strictly because the whole thing feels like a push to just get you to install CashApp on your phone. And that is on top of not wanting to use anything Intuit owned anymore. I'll gladly pay $10 to file my state taxes if I can avoid them giving it to Intuit.


CK Tax was sold to Block as a part of the acquisition by Intuit - Intuit sees nothing from it any more.


What region are you in?

In the US it clearly gives me the option to buy a digital copy: https://i.imgur.com/dIbfnjP.png


Deep Packet Inspection


When my family first got broadband via Comcast@home back in the early 2000s they had a proviso saying if you wanted more then one computer required a separate subscription. My dad and my bother quickly figured out we could get around this by using Windows Internet Connection Sharing. We eventually got a Linksys Router that did the same job and was faster. IIRC even most dial up ISPs did the same thing, if you wanted more then one computer online you had to use separate creds.


I'm actually intrigued by the concept but sweet jebus that thing is ugly.


I have no idea why but my cat went nuts when I played the sample.


I'm no expert but doesn't chinese have single symbols/words that when translated turn into multiple words. And it maybe unrelated but don't chinese characters take up more space in the ASCII table or something. Again I'm no expert.


Ascii does not include Chinese characters. It doesn't even include European alphabets. You might be talking about unicode?

> I'm no expert but doesn't chinese have single symbols/words that when translated turn into multiple words.

Often more like one Chinese character per Chinese word. But you also have compound words of multiple characters, I believe. And then, translation to English isn't word for word, either.


Usually one or two characters per Chinese word, two characters being much more common for anything other than simple words. More than two characters is not unheard of for less commonly used words.


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