it is so nice of them to explain the fact using the GNU Unifont in commercial non-free softwares clarifying when it is required to be published to public domain.
nice comment! how does enforcing type system help improve the performance? is there any article that sheds more light? also, did you mean static typing instead of strong?
Static typing means that typechecking can be done at compile-time, and optimizations can be applied then. Dynamic typing generally means that some runtime layer needs to do typechecking during execution. So, as a rule of thumb, it's usually assumed that a statically-typed language will be faster than a dynamically-typed one.
> The current target platforms are Rockchip RK3399, Allwinner A64/H5, Raspberry Pi 3 and Opteron A1100.
That's a good list, it may cover a number of "Maker"-oriented single-board computers that are fun to play with.
Note that most of the Raspberry Pi chip is its Broadcom Videocore IV graphics processor, which is not supported by the OpenBSD OS. You would have to hook up a screen to the GPIO pins, I think, rather than getting display out of the HDMI port. There are lots of LCD display "hats" on the market.
(I am typing this on my iPad, which is an iOS device, which is a descendent of BSD.)
Armbian and DietPI pages, although Linux oriented, contain a fairly long list of hackable boards, so you can look there for boards using supported platforms.
does anybody else find the first comment on the original article to be lame enough? he apparently thought it was a click-bait or something and uses lame-ass arguments to prove his bullshit assumption
It doesn't. The subsidies are used as a bootstrapping mechanism, the projections in the article indicate that as the market scales, costs of solar energy production will drop below coal.