RISC-V is just an instruction set -- same idea as x86. While it is, of course, important to also have an open instuction set, that is somewhat separate from this post's intention. I am referring to the physical manufacture of semiconductors, RISC-V, or otherwise.
If you look at this documentation it outlines various methods of generating URL thumbnails. Essentially, a separate request from the client for only the URL is made to the server which then returns a thumbnail. It's an absolutely moronic design choice, if you ask me.
EDIT (2023-10-02T01:35Z): Do note that the link that I provided is for Synapse v1.37 -- Synapse is currently on v1.97. Curiously, the documentation for the new versions of Synapse have removed the sections talking about URL previews. I'm not sure what's up with that.
RT373YSQwMB+y28d7xm/Xybihcmx9jgkd4RskvPuoFQ3hapIv4exdmtMe+QxsVqos5odxTVuKAftj53zXFFQyD7MK0985zDvfKYjIj+b+8rNSAG0fArG2SXVBW0mLXqRnXiZXiknoPekyu7MKr1aD8k9DMQzCap60oNWmOLoCQXdmEetiEnhGL8zW2KR9P4MxtzxMzLzPWJyLmpLbXVJdxTmHFN32IvMHiyY29iJqZegmIuav0+IP2c3leGrJs75eGW2uWoj8J8VWWzflWfRRO3FwzJFRIvrptPN0osD0wMrgLJ4FYwXZQetIEJ99TxWvxqTYak90q6HxvVygOyHPw==
I don't follow what you mean.
I have found that instances that do seem to modify the source code just use the existing "Code" link and simply point it to their own repo instead.
The first two lines of the for loop,
byte upper_byte = input_bin >> 8;
byte lower_byte = input_bin & 0x00FF;
don't really accomplish anything. The first line is bit shifting to the right 8, and then you just bitwise and it resulting in the same thing. For example, starting with input_bin
:
1000 0000 0000 0000
>> 8
0000 0000 1000 0000
& 0xFF
0000 0000 1000 0000
So, every time you go through a cycle of the for loop, you'll just start with the same values in upper_byte
, and lower_byte
. To sequentially output each shifted value, you'll instead want something like:
output_value = 0b1
for i = 1 to 16:
latch(low)
shift_out(output_value)
latch(high)
output_value = output_value << 1
That is, if I interpereted correctly that you want the shift registers to output the following:
output_count, upper_shift_register, lower_shift_register
1, 00000000, 00000001
2, 00000000, 00000010
3, 00000000, 00000100
.
.
.
16, 10000000, 00000000
Note: Lemmy has a bug where it doesn't format some symbols correctly, so the left angle bracket gets formatted as <
. The same issue exists for the right angle bracket, the ampersand, and I would presume others.
solution
1... Qxg2 2. Kxg2 Nf4+ 3. Kg1 Nh3#? Nice queen sacrifice
Does your network not support UPnP? You shouldn't normally need to port forward in order to seed a torrent, unless your network prevents NAT traversal.