I think it probably could be, in Lisp. Like the one they used in early MIT computer labs (Scheme).
Many of the best ever known programmers came out of MIT computer labs, and for good reason.
I like to discuss tech, but also politics and religion. I hope that I can teach people some things I think I know.
The name’s Theo Mulraney of England, and I am trying to “transcend” current Humanity by “banging on about computers” (and “aliens”) that “encode certain types of abstract data”.
I think it probably could be, in Lisp. Like the one they used in early MIT computer labs (Scheme).
Many of the best ever known programmers came out of MIT computer labs, and for good reason.
It would probably start to look a lot like Lisp programming, as in how Crash Bandicoot was made.
GNU Guix seems quite important to me.
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Lisp code is already like this. That’s why I keep trying to explain it to programmers. Try reading the book SICP, published decades ago by MIT computer researchers.
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I would like to say I’m not too concerned by this personally, as long as all their data remains public to all.
Ow, my 3D, folded computer Orbs!
People who can build up advanced logic systems can make or adapt their own Unix-like operating system on any computer. It happened before and it’ll happen again, even if the computer uses confusing Orb stuff instead of modern bits and bytes.
You mean the complex mathematical Orbs powering your computer?
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Then you probably shouldn’t use Nix. Maybe try another distro if you haven’t already.
NixOS is probably a bit more confusing than most Linux distros, but it has a huge amount of advantages too. It has very up to date software and probably never has dependency issues.
Yes. And I want academics online like Matt Parker to discuss it with me.