Respect, but this is kinda the hard way - I just plugged mine (dumb machine, not smart) in via an energy metering plug, and when energy use drops to less than 10W for more than 2 minutes, it’s done - very simple homeassistant automation. Convenient for me as the machine is 500m from the house.
Nex is a cybersecurity student in a house of similar people, they're gonna take every way :3
quote:
> The plan is, in future, since we can't hack something that doesn't have a brain, to instead attach a brain to it. The dishwasher is easy, we can just whack that on a smart plug and monitor when the power use surges and drops. The dryer is a bit more difficult, since they pull a LOT of power, and smart plugs typically either don't support that much power, or are incredibly expensive. So that's likely going to be some fancy vibration sensor-based thingy
Hey, one of the Continuwuity team here - the name was a bit of a placeholder we picked as we were setting up the project, and we are open to changing it if we find something that fits the project and is a step up. Please join our Matrix rooms if you have a suggestion or more in-depth feedback, or want to participate in any polls we might run.
If TCMalloc uses bazel, then you build it with Bazel. It just needs to install itself where you tell it to, and then either it has given you a pkg-config file, or otherwise, your own build system needs some library-finding logic for it ("find module" in CMake terms). Or - are you saying the problem is that you need to install Bazel?
Building complete, optimised binaries can be much more complicated than just linking in a SO/A file. Things like cross-language LTO and PGO can be massive for performance and require integration throughout the build system.
Around 2018, the ultra buggy Matrix messenger had a onShakeListener that triggered a dialog "It seems you are frustrated. Do you want to raise a bug report?"
quote:
> The plan is, in future, since we can't hack something that doesn't have a brain, to instead attach a brain to it. The dishwasher is easy, we can just whack that on a smart plug and monitor when the power use surges and drops. The dryer is a bit more difficult, since they pull a LOT of power, and smart plugs typically either don't support that much power, or are incredibly expensive. So that's likely going to be some fancy vibration sensor-based thingy