• oshaboy@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Considering the guys on the thread don’t know MIPS is an assembly language, I think there’s some projection involved.

    Though I am not sure why an iOS developer would program in MIPS and not ARM. Maybe there’s some sort of crazy Apple MIPS hardware I never heard of… Or they had to pick one architecture and they happened to pick the one that had nothing to do with her company.

      • oshaboy@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        They obviously meant in the post that she can program in MIPS assembly. And they shortened it to just MIPS. I wouldn’t be surprised if the “Java” mentioned was actually Javascript.

        • SomeRandomWords
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          1 year ago

          There’s a very high likelihood that the “Java” referenced is actually Java, since the college that they went to teaches Java as a part of the standard curriculum (or at least they did via UMass Amherst cross-courses a few years ago). With that being said, I agree that it’s likely MIPS assembly being referenced because that’s what most people mean when they say they can program for MIPS.

    • stewsters@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      We did MIPS in college, more as a “this is what assembly is” than a practical thing we would use.