

Hmm, that one worked for me, but maybe the wayback machine will work for you? https://web.archive.org/web/20250618100950/https://www.linuxjournal.com/content/arch-linux-breaks-new-ground-official-rust-init-system-support-arrives
Hmm, that one worked for me, but maybe the wayback machine will work for you? https://web.archive.org/web/20250618100950/https://www.linuxjournal.com/content/arch-linux-breaks-new-ground-official-rust-init-system-support-arrives
The article vanished some time after being published, here’s an archive link.
If you’ve asked in a friendly way, without putting stress on her, and accepted the ‘no’ without making a fuss and in the same friendly way, it doesn’t tend to cause difficulty in my experience.
The entire design and architecture of Wayland always seemed like a bad idea, and has inevitably fragmented. This posr from the KiCad team is a pretty damning indictment of just how bad an idea it is. There’s undoubtedly some good stuff being built on it, the tiling dedktops look particulrly interesting, but they’re built on sand right now.
I wish to end all wars
/turns into the letter s.
I recall reading about that research some time ago, thanks for reminding me of it.
I was perhaps being a bit slapdash referring to information being destroyed, as in the quantum sense, yes, it can be recovered. However the recovery posited in the paper is a theoretical simulation of the information that entered the blackhole, which, I suppose could be used as a direct analogy for the actual information that entered the black hole, or maybe somehow used to create an actual copy of it, but, as far as I can see, it also requires that the black hole completely evaporates to release all of the information. Without all of the information, the information you do have does not describe the initial state, as they put it in the article it is ‘encrypted’.
Our initial discussion was about whether conciousness can be destroyed. Given that there is a period of time between information entering the black hole and having sufficient information back to create a simulation of it, and that conciousness arises from the detailed structure and working of our brains, I would say that a consciousness that falls into a black hole has, indeed been destroyed. Whether the mooted simulation means that said conciousness can be reconstructed at a future point is a different question, and rather resembles the Ship of Theseus question.
There also seem to be significant questions about the exact conclusions of the paper as it is very theoretical and based on a number of simplifying assumptions. I’ve tried to find the original paper, but it looks like it may be spread over several, and I really don’t know where to start with sentences like ‘We reformulate recent insights into black hole information in a manner emphasizing operationally-defined notions of entropy, Lorentz-signature descriptions, and asymptotically flat spacetimes. With the help of replica wormholes, we find that experiments of asymptotic observers are consistent with black holes as unitary quantum systems, with density of states given by the Bekenstein-Hawking formula.’
So, in summary, yes, information is not actually destroyed when if falls into a black hole, it’s just mangled beyond recognition, entangled with all the other information that has, and will, enter the black hole, and can only be reconstructed by theoretically entangling all of the radiation the hole emits over it’s entire lifetime with a suitable simulation!
Black holes are a good example of information destruction. Matter and energy fall into the gravity well, and eventually are reemited as Hawking radiation, but as far as current theories go, there’s no way to reconstruct the information that made up the original matter or energy from that radiation.
Information isn’t a “thing” but the relationship between, and exact quantum state of, things. Once that state is disrupted, the information is gone.
Information is destroyed all the time, conciousness is just information, and will cease to exist in a meaningful form when the structure of matter hosting it (your body, and in particular your brain) ceases to function in a way that supports that.
The energy that motivated your body and acted as signals in your brain will disipate. Your actual matter will stick around in one form or another. After all, we are all “star stuff”, and given long enough, our “stuff” will return to the universe at large.
That does feel rther like jumping out of a plane and hoping you can finish making your paracute before it’s too late.
The concept of moving on from X11 is a good one, but making Wayland just a protocol that every compositor has to implement separately, and having so many optional larts to the spec seems like a guarantee that the ecosystem around it will never properly mature.
The KiCad developers have a good article about some of the issues with Wayland here.