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The Redot (Godot Fork) Launch X Space -- with Q & A

The Open Source Godot Game Engine enacted a mass banning for political reasons. Redot is a "non-political" fork. Let's find out their plan in their Twitter / X space they held to launch the project. The Lunduke Journal was there with lots of questions (jump to the 39 minute mark for the Q & A).

Questions touch on a wide variety of topics, including: Being seen as a "political protest project", preventing a "woke take over" as happened with Godot, feature goals, keeping momentum after the initial excitement dies down, and more.

01:03:18
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October 02, 2024
Lunduke Talking about Lifetime Subscription & The Lunduke Journal Affiliate Program
00:18:31
October 02, 2024
A Code of Conduct... That's GOOD?!

The Ladybird Web Browser has a new Code of Conduct. Derived from the Ruby CoC. And... it's actually not too bad! At a time when CoC's are often weaponized to discriminate against people and destroy projects (looking at you Godot, GNOME, Python, and many others), this is rather refreshing.

00:13:53
October 02, 2024
DOOM Now Runs on a Quantum Computer (Which Doesn't Even Exist)

A hypothetical quantum computer… 70 times more powerful than the most powerful Quantum Computer.

The article: https://lunduke.locals.com/post/6180209/doom-now-runs-on-a-quantum-computer-which-doesn-t-exist

00:13:50
November 22, 2023
The futility of Ad-Blockers

Ads are filling the entirety of the Web -- websites, podcasts, YouTube videos, etc. -- at an increasing rate. Prices for those ad placements are plummeting. Consumers are desperate to use ad-blockers to make the web palatable. Google (and others) are desperate to break and block ad-blockers. All of which results in... more ads and lower pay for creators.

It's a fascinatingly annoying cycle. And there's only one viable way out of it.

Looking for the Podcast RSS feed or other links? Check here:
https://lunduke.locals.com/post/4619051/lunduke-journal-link-central-tm

Give the gift of The Lunduke Journal:
https://lunduke.locals.com/post/4898317/give-the-gift-of-the-lunduke-journal

The futility of Ad-Blockers
November 21, 2023
openSUSE says "No Lunduke allowed!"

Those in power with openSUSE make it clear they will not allow me anywhere near anything related to the openSUSE project. Ever. For any reason.

Well, that settles that, then! Guess I won't be contributing to openSUSE! 🤣

Looking for the Podcast RSS feed or other links?
https://lunduke.locals.com/post/4619051/lunduke-journal-link-central-tm

Give the gift of The Lunduke Journal:
https://lunduke.locals.com/post/4898317/give-the-gift-of-the-lunduke-journal

openSUSE says "No Lunduke allowed!"
September 13, 2023
"Andreas Kling creator of Serenity OS & Ladybird Web Browser" - Lunduke’s Big Tech Show - September 13th, 2023 - Ep 044

This episode is free for all to enjoy and share.

Be sure to subscribe here at Lunduke.Locals.com to get all shows & articles (including interviews with other amazing nerds).

"Andreas Kling creator of Serenity OS & Ladybird Web Browser" - Lunduke’s Big Tech Show - September 13th, 2023 - Ep 044

I just bought something stupid that I've wanted since about 2008 when I first heard of its existence.
I've had an ebay saved search for years on this and finally got one.

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You folks are a bad influence on me.

Here I was a happy and contended Audible subscriber with over 600 books in my library. But what if Amazon doesn't like a tweet of mine and locks my account?

Unlike with the eBooks I buy from Amazon, which I archive as EPUBs to read in my preferred app and keep as a backup, I had no such protection for my Audible books. I didn't care as I'm perfectly happy with the Audible app for listening to my books.

BUT - What if Amazon goes out of business?
BUT - What if the Woke Police take such complete control of Amazon that they delete all my non-woke audio books?

I can't remember the last time I looked into liberating my Audible books, but as of today, it's pretty easy. Frankly, easier than liberating the eBooks.

So now I have 175 gig of eBooks taking up space on my hard drive, and I'll have to make a couple backups of those for redundancy.

IT'S ALL YOUR FAULT!

:)

Actually, I'll convert them into 32bit mono first, so that I can save a lot of space.

I used...

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I just had a thought, has anyone heard any news on Clint from LGR? Isn’t he in Asheville, NC?

Edit: Found this.

October 02, 2024
Lifetime Subscriptions & the Lunduke Journal Affiliate Program

Short-Short Version: With the introduction of the new Affiliate Program, the Lifetime Subscription option for The Lunduke Journal is being phased out.  All current Lifetime Subscriptions will be honored (for life), but no new Lifetime Subscriptions will be available.  The last date which new Lifetime Subscriptions will be available is Friday, October 11th, 2024.

 

Over the last few years, the "Lifetime Subscription" has been a wonderful thing for The Lunduke Journal.  It has provided significant bursts of revenue during those early "growing the business" years -- which made it possible for The Lunduke Journal to stay afloat, entirely thanks to subscriptions, at a time when other Tech publications (even well established ones) who relied heavily on advertising... were going out of business or downsizing (and turning to AI for content creation).

As The Lunduke Journal subscriber base grew, and matured as a publication, it became obvious that the Lifetime Subscription option needed to be phased out (in fact, many of you long-time subscribers have seen multiple attempts at doing exactly that).   But the time was never quite right.  Pieces of the puzzle (for running a successful publication business) were missing.

With the introduction of The Lunduke Journal Affiliate Program, the final piece is now in place.  As such, the Lifetime Subscription option is being retired.

  • New Lifetime Subscriptions will be available until Friday, October 11th, 2024.  After which, no new Lifetime Subscriptions can be purchased.
  • All Lifetime Subscriptions obtained will be honored.  For life.  Naturally.
  • As one last hurrah of the Lifetime Subscriptions, I've discounted them to $200 for their final days.

If you want one, grab one.

 

The Need for the Affiliate Program

 

I have been searching for an effective -- and easy to administer -- way to run an affiliate system for The Lunduke Journal for quite some time.  A system where other publishers (of any kind of content), or even simply avid fans, could promote The Lunduke Journal... and get a cut of the revenue.

There are two key reasons why this has been such an important thing to get in place:

  1. With other people promoting The Lunduke Journal -- and getting paid for their efforts -- that allows the publication to reach a wider audience and increase subscriptions (without me needing to focus on promotional activities quite as much).  Thus: more time and energy to focus on articles and shows.  Which is a good thing.
  2. And to provide a revenue stream for other publishers (podcasters, bloggers, etc.) to promote something that is not tied (in any way) to Big Tech.

Both are critical points, but I want to talk about that second one for a moment.

The Tech Publishing World (tm) is, currently, highly dependent upon advertising for one Tech Company or another.  And, with advertising revenue drying up -- rather rapidly -- this has left Tech Publications (of all kinds) in a position where they need to bend over backwards to make their few advertisers happy.

Which mean no publishing content critical of those Tech Companies.  Or any company those companies do business with.  And, most definitely, no publishing of content which might offend people with certain political leanings.

One misstep, and the last crumbs of Big Tech advertising revenue get swept into the dustbin.  Poof.  Another Tech publication either goes out of business or turns into (yet another) "Press releases turned into articles generated entirely by AI chatbots" outlet.

An solution was needed.  One which allowed publishers to continue putting out content, without changing their advertising focused business model, and without being reliant on making "Big Tech" happy.

With The Lunduke Journal Affiliate Program, any publisher can replace their Big Tech-centric advertising with ads for a Tech publication which regularly spits in the face of Big Tech.  And, importantly, continue earning revenue.

Because this effort is so important -- across the Tech Publishing world -- I have chosen to do an even split of all revenue with affiliates.  For every new subscription referred from an Affiliate, that Affiliate gets 50% of the revenue.

The goal is to make this as profitable as possible, in order to make it a viable replacement for current Big Tech advertising.  And making it a 50/50 split goes a long way toward making that happen.

Obviously, not every publication will be a good fit for promoting The Lunduke Journal.  But, for those which are, they now have that as an option.

As of a few days ago, Locals (which, owned by parent company Rumble, hosts The Lunduke Journal) has begun rolling out functionality (to select publishers) which makes an automated affiliate program possible.  And The Lunduke Journal jumped at the chance to implement it.

Meaning Locals handles all of the processing, revenue splits, and payouts automatically.  Very, very little overhead is required from me (and almost zero day-to-day administrative work).

Perfect.  This was the solution we'd been waiting for.

 

Lifetime & Affiliate Don't Mix

 

And, with the creation of The Lunduke Journal Affiliate Program, the time was finally right to fully sunset the Lifetime Subscription option.

The "Lifetime Sub" option had a good run -- and was huge help in bootstrapping the funding of the publication through those early days.  But it was time to put it out to pasture.

Besides no longer being needed for the business, there was also simply no reasonable way to tie the "Lifetime Subscriptions" and the "Affiliate Program" together.  The two simply do not work together on the back-end (they function in very different ways, from an administrative standpoint).

To everyone who picked up a Lifetime Subscription over the early years: Thank you.  You helped keep the lights on at The Lunduke Journal as it was finding itself and maturing as a publication.  You made all of this possible.  Your support -- both financial and otherwise -- has meant the absolute world to me.

I'm going to repeat these bullet points to make sure everyone knows exactly what is happening:

  • New Lifetime Subscriptions will be available until Friday, October 11th, 2024.  After which, no new Lifetime Subscriptions can be purchased.
  • All Lifetime Subscriptions obtained will be honored.  For life.  Naturally.
  • As one last hurrah of the Lifetime Subscriptions, I've discounted them to $200 for their final days.

Details on how to grab them are below.  Zero pressure.  If you've ever wanted one, I wanted to provide one last chance to do so.

 

How To Get a Lifetime Subscription

All the benefits of a Standard Monthly subscription... but pay once and never need to pay again.  $200.

  • Go to Lunduke.Locals.com/support.
  • Select "Give Once".
  • Enter "200" into the amount field.
  • After checking out, Lunduke will toss you an email once your account is set to full lifetime status.

How To Get a Lifetime Subscription (with Bitcoin)

You can also obtain a Lifetime Subscription via Bitcoin.

  • Make sure you have a Lunduke.Locals.com account (a free account works just fine).
  • Send $200 worth of Bitcoin (or more) to the following address:

bc1qyjakve8fywm8pz2v99v57yhjj0vzr2vjze6fcq

  • Email "[email protected]" with the following information: What time you made the transaction, how much was sent (in Bitcoin), and the email address you use (or plan to use) on Locals.com.

Here's a handy-dandy QR code you can scan that also has a Bitcoin Wallet Address for The Lunduke Journal:

102127_2uuarwwiqcds5s2.jpeg

 

 

 

Read full Article
October 01, 2024
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DOOM Now Runs on a Quantum Computer (Which Doesn’t Exist)
A hypothetical quantum computer… 70 times more powerful than the most powerful Quantum Computer.

When it comes to computers... I'm a pretty "Ones and Zeros" kinda guy.  Regardless of the platform or processor architecture, binary is what I'm used to.

Quantum Computing?  For me, that's Black Magic Funky Voodoo (tm).

Instead of 1's & 0's -- like a normal computer -- Quantum Computers use "qubits", a data type that can be either a 1 or a 0 (like binary).  Or a "qubit" can be a 1 that has "aspects" that are "kinda sorta like" a 0.  Or a 0 which is also, simultaneously, a 1.

In other words... Black Magic Funky Voodoo (tm).

But the number one thing that gives me pause about Quantum Computing is, I would wager, the exact same thing that is causing you to not currently be interested in buying a Quantum Computer.

The lack of DOOM.

Well, buckle up, Buttercup.  Because someone has just ported DOOM to a Quantum Computer.

Ladies and gentlemen, I give you: QuanDOOM.

 

 

Ok, it doesn't look quite like a 256 color, VGA DOOM... but, still.  Pretty cool!

According to the developer, there are some pretty significant differences to regular "DOOM".  Namely (quoting the dev):

  • It's only the first level, more could be added, it's just a matter of mapping them.
  • Everything is x-ray due to reversibility shenanigans.
  • No color because it'd make rendering a lot harder and the x-ray would look weirder.
  • No music or sound.
  • No level secrets, although again it's just a matter of mapping.

 

From the developer:

 

"Despite decades of active research, there is yet to be developed a single practical use for quantum computers. This changes today, with the release of Quandoom, a port of the first level of DOOM designed for a quantum computer, given as a single QASM file, using a mere 70,000 qubits and 80 million gates. Although such a quantum computer doesn't exist right now, Quandoom is efficiently simulatable on a classical computer, capable of running at 10-20 fps on my laptop using the accompanying lightweight (150 lines of C++) QASM simulator."

 

Wait.  Wait.  QuanDOOM requires 70,000 qubits?

70 thousand?  How does that compare to the currently available Quantum Computers?  Well, heh, the most powerful Quantum Computer in the world -- produced by Atom Computing -- currently handles roughly 1 thousand qubits.

 

 

In other words: QuanDOOM requires a Quantum Computer that is roughly 70 times more powerful than anything currently available.

Currently, it can be run within a simulator -- because a Quantum Computer capable of running it doesn't exist -- on both Linux and macOS.  Gobbling up between 5 and 6 GB of RAM.

 

"The circuit needs 72,376 total qubits, 8,376 qubits not counting the screen, of which 6,986 are ancilla qubits. The circuit file has 83,651,224 lines, so at least that many gates (will actually be more, since many lines are subroutines)."

 

 

Now, QuanDOOM must function differently than regular DOOM.  Because Quantum Computers, compared to Binary Computers, are really friggin weird.

So, how does QuanDOOM work?

 

"The game loop is as follows:

1. the user pressing a key sets the value of one of the input qubits

2. the QASM file containing all of the quantum gates is applied to the entire state

3. the last 64,000 qubits are measured and displayed as a 320 x 200 screen of binary pixels

4. the screen and input qubits are reset and the process repeats"

 

... weird.

I mean, don't get me wrong.  Super, duper cool!  I mean, heck!  This is DOOM!  On a Quantum Computer!

But.  Wow.  So weird.

This also leaves me wondering how far out Quantum Computers are from being truly useful.  I hate to be "that guy", but if you can't run a crazily stripped down version of DOOM on the most powerful Quantum Computer on Earth... yet you can easily "simulate" it on a Thinkpad?

How useful can Quantum Computers actually be?

Read full Article
October 01, 2024
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Last week at The Lunduke Journal (Sep 22 - Sep 28, 2024)
Killer printers!  Linux on 4 bit computers!  Nuclear powered servers!  And... Winamp!

Last week was, in a word, completely friggin' bonkers.

The news stories just kept on coming!  Some super nerdy stuff.  Some super political stuff.  And... Winamp?!  I mean... what the heck was in the water last week?

The Shows

The Articles

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