Marcelo Toledo

startups, empreendedorismo e tecnologia

Software

Emacs is sleeping

Steve Yegge posted yesterday a book in his blog, XEmacs is Dead. Long Live XEmacs! Ok, it’s not a book – but looks like -, it’s a very interesting article and we share many ideas. I don’t know how to define it right now, but long time ago, Emacs was my favorite software, I used it for almost everything besides editing files, mail, news, shell, scripting, web browser, irc, calendar, contacts, etc. I even started writing a book about it five years ago, I wanted to finish it a while back, but I got an access denied from my editor,…

Interview with Donald Knuth

Andrew Binstock and Donald Knuth converse on the success of open source, the problem with multicore architecture, the disappointing lack of interest in literate programming, the menace of reusable code, and that urban legend about winning a programming contest with a single compilation. Andrew Binstock: You are one of the fathers of the open-source revolution, even if you aren’t widely heralded as such. You previously have stated that you released TeX as open source because of the problem of proprietary implementations at the time, and to invite corrections to the code—both of which are key drivers for open-source projects today.…

Re: PCI MAINTAINER change

From the LKML: * Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote:   > On Mon, 21 Apr 2008, Jesse Barnes wrote: > > And now I get to figure out just how much trouble I’ve gotten myself into…   Mwhahahaaa! Sucker. You’ll find out.

Hacking the Linux 2.6 kernel

I was looking for something related to the linux kernel, went to fall in ibm website displaying these two documents, written almost three years ago, introducing some very basic idea of the linux 2.6 kernel, two sets of around 20 pages each, interesting introductory material: Hacking the Linux 2.6 kernel, Part 1: Getting ready Hacking the Linux 2.6 kernel, Part 2: Making your first hack

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