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Hardcore Observation #419 What will the Internet look like in 2046?

author:Hardcore old king
Hardcore Observation #419 What will the Internet look like in 2046?

<h3>What will the Internet look like in 2046? </h3>

Hardcore Observation #419 What will the Internet look like in 2046?

The Internet Archive, known for offering the "Web Time Machine," recently developed a future time machine: the Wayforward Machine, which can "fast-forward" directly to 2046. Of course, this is just a satire on the Internet that is currently rife with advertising and privacy theft.

Lao Wang review: You can enter the URL in it and press Enter to see what the website you visit will look like in the future?

<h3>Facebook disabled the "one-click check" tool</h3>

Hardcore Observation #419 What will the Internet look like in 2046?

A developer who developed a tool to get people to automatically unfollow friends and groups on Facebook said his work has been permanently banned by the social networking site. Facebook allows users to unwatch individually, removing their content from a "message feed" controlled by Facebook's algorithms. The tool automates the process, erasing the user's "newsfeed" in an instant. The authors say I haven't lost anything because I can still see them by going directly to my favorite friends pages and groups. But I gained amazing control, and I was no longer tempted to scroll down the infinite content. Overnight, my "Facebook addiction" became manageable. Facebook said the software he created automates user interactions, violating the site's terms of service.

Lao Wang's comments: Although it is best to simply delete the Facebook App, your "one-click off" tool makes Facebook feel bad.

<h3>Google Data Center tries to shift to the mainline kernel</h3>

Hardcore Observation #419 What will the Internet look like in 2046?

The kernel running on Google's data center product system is called Prodkernel, and it's based on older versions of the Linux kernel, plus about 9,000 patches from Google that include a variety of internal APIs, hardware support, performance optimizations, and other necessary fine-tuning. Every two years or so, these patches are ported to newer versions of the kernel. But Google is finding this mode of work more and more challenging. To solve this problem, Google launched a new kernel project, Project Icebreaker.

Lao Wang's comment: It turns out that it is becoming increasingly unviable to develop private branches behind closed doors in today's rapid development of the Linux kernel.

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