infosec.pub

spacesweedkid27, to linuxmemes in Cmake me!

I fucking hate building tools or package managers like maven because I am too lazy too learn on how to use them.

Not at all are they intentional.

I will just copy the source or some precompiled library from a git and embedd in my project. Try and stop me.

0x4E4F,

Meeh, if it works 🤷.

Alfika07, to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes

Yeah, but why would Microsoft post this? They barely make any open-source software so why are they promoting FOSS development?

0x4E4F,

It’s a meme dude, it’s a play on poster from the early 2000’s about pirating media.

Alfika07,

Okay but is this completely fake or was this an actual FOSS promotion poster and the creator of the meme wrote Microsoft on it?

0x4E4F,

It was a joke, a meme, nothing more, meant to amuse. No promotion intended.

Mr_1077, (edited ) to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes

Communism…

0x4E4F,

Nah, Linus would never let that happen.

dannoffs,
@dannoffs@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Man on crypto themed instance has dumbass take, more news at 10.

Mr_1077,

I am aware of that lmao

At 10: This crypto nerd also seems to be using a lot of proprietary software as well as an Invidia GPU. Dave, have you got more information?

-Yes I do actually. Additionally, This Linux noob appears to be using a Chinese smartphone! People like this are certainly a disgrace to the Linux community.

possiblylinux127, to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes

Oh great, the Communists have found this community. Time to make a new one.

aBundleOfFerrets,

Good luck

uis,
@uis@lemmy.world avatar

Why downvote? I and comrade Starlight approve.

https://derpicdn.net/img/view/2023/5/9/3122381.jpg

The more communities - the more communists.

Cowbee,

Why are you surprised that there’s huge overlap between FOSS and Leftist beliefs? They go hand in hand.

mojo, (edited )

Yeah but communists are a whole other level. They consider liberals to be nazis lol

Cowbee,

That’s not really true, in my experience. They see Nazis as Nazis, and Liberals as misguided and naive.

IndefiniteBen,

As is the case with most groups, there are loud douchebags with extremist views (relative to the group) that give a bad impression.

TheSanSabaSongbird,

Right, whereas we see them as deeply stupid and naive.

jaybone,

Even though all real world implementations of communism have failed miserably, liberals must be the naive ones.

Cowbee,

Do you consider drastically improving upon previous conditions to be a miserable failure? Ignoring that Communism has never existed, and only specific forms of Marxism-Leninism have existed, and ignoring that MLism is only a fraction of all of Communist ideology, even MLism drastically improved upon previous conditions.

I’m not even close to a tankie, but I’m genuinely curious what you mean by what you’ve said.

HardNut,

Sure, and capitalism has never existed either, only specific forms of libertarian-constitutionalism 🤷‍♂️

Now, if you can see how silly what I just typed is, you should be able to see how silly it is to claim communism has never been tried. You say yourself that Marxist-Leninism is a communist ideology, so if it’s being attempted, then it’s valid to say a form of communism is being attempted.

Do you consider drastically improving upon previous conditions to be a miserable failure?

All of the citation needed. Don’t make the mistake of including the goals of outcome as part of the definition, that’s just cheating. Op obviously rejects the idea that it makes things better, you can’t just assume it a priori.

Cowbee,

Socialism has existed, that’s what the USSR was. It was an ML Socialist state, but it failed to become a Stateless, Classless, Moneyless society. In other words, it failed to reach Communism. Communism has been attempted, but never reached. It never reached the Communist stage, so Communism itself hasn’t been tried, only the ML form of Socialism.

The Soviet Union doubled life expectancy from the mid 30s to the mid 70s, had constant GDP growth until it liberalized and collapsed, guaranteed free Healthcare and education, and had mass housing initiatives. It had far lower wealth inequality than before or after its existence. This is all freely available information.

Am I a USSR Stan? Fuck no, the Politburo was a corrupt mess and Stalin was a thug. However, you’ve completely misconstrued my argument.

HardNut,

Okay I see what you mean. You agree attempted, but never achieved, I see that now. I’m sorry for misconstruing your argument, but I still take issue with your assertion that things got drastically better. That’s a big red flag to me and tends to be a sign that someone is having a big misunderstanding.

.

The Soviet Union doubled life expectancy from the mid 30s to the mid 70s

While true, it is essentially a lie by omission to leave out other key details. For one thing, if you think about it, what kind of conditions would one have to be in initially to make doubling the life expectancy even possible?

The Russians were in horribly dire straits. Life expectancy fell from 37 to 32 from 1930-1935. The chief cause was forced collectivization of farming by Stalin. Privately owned farms were confiscated by the state, and were horribly mismanaged which resulted in famine. Socialist policy directly caused that famine.

Life expectancy started going up again in 1935 after they relaxed grain procurement quotas, decentralized, and opened up private plots. This is the scaling back of socialist policy, and the implementation of capitalist policy. Capitalism policy is to thank for stopping the famine.

had constant GDP growth until it liberalized and collapsed

The US has had exponential growth, rather than linear, along with many of its allies. Russia also supplies a large percentage of the world’s oil, you’d have to make fucking up an art to make your GDP go down with a supply like that.

guaranteed free Healthcare and education,

Both were an improvement considering I don’t think much was their for either before, so I’ll give ya that.

and had mass housing initiatives

These came in response to a housing crisis caused by inadequate supply of houses when the USSR nationalized it under the Central Board of Architecture. The housing initiatives did help, but the housing problem was never solved, and it was a problem created by them.

It had far lower wealth inequality than before or after its existence

Because he killed the rich people, and no one had anything. Equality is not an intrinsically good quality, especially when it means everybody is equally impoverished.

.

I guess this is why I find the observation that communism has never existed pretty naive. Socialism, in its most honest representation, is really the state ownership of the means of production. The way Stalin held ownership in common, was to collectivize it under the state that all citizens are part of. If we are trying to achieve a stateless society, then holding ownership in common is an antithetical goal. Every step the USSR took away from common ownership was a step towards private ownership, and therefor a step towards capitalism.

Cowbee,

I wasn’t referring to 30s and 70s as time periods, but the actual life expectancies. LE dropped sharply during the formation of the USSR due to civil war and WWI, and during the 30s due to famine from collectivization. After collectivization and WWII, the USSR was food secure and LE jumped sharply, combined with free Healthcare and mass housing initiatives.

Again, pre-USSR LE was far lower, and post-USSR there was another drop in LE until the last decade or so.

The US has insane growth because it managed to dodge all of the damage of WWII and export Imperialism and control over the global economy as it solidified itself as the reigning superpower. The USSR was a developing country, nowhere near as developed, and had a far more active role in WWII. Not a fair comparison, IMO.

The US has far worse housing problems even today than the USSR had. The USSR attempted to solve this problem, the US has not.

People in the USSR had far more than they had under the Tsars, and the idea that those at the top were cartoonishly wealthy is false. They didn’t have luxury goods, but they had little issues with necessities.

Holding ownership in common is the only way to have a Stateless society, Private Property Rights require a state while public property does not, as the community itself enforces this.

All in all, I am not pro-USSR. I think the process of Democratic Centralism is highly flawed and not accountable to the Workers, as the Politburo sustained itself. I also think Stalin was a horrible thug, and tragedies like the Katyn Massacre should be learned from so as to never repeat them. However, it’s also important to acknowledge that many parts of the USSR did work, and as such we should equally learn from where they did succeed.

My opinion is that decentralization is a fantastic thing, and is an excellent way to combat central control. However, this cannot be meaningfully achieved in a top-down system like Capitalism.

HardNut, (edited )

I wasn’t referring to 30s and 70s as time periods, but the actual life expectancies.

Oh, I must have assumed you meant otherwise because the USSR never reached that high of a life expectancy. They peaked in 1970 at 68 years old, at which point it trended down again. Russians never reached a life expectancy of 70 until 2015. You should also consider how volatile that graph has been in general, it simply isn’t good for a state to have that much influence over the life expectancy of all of its people.

That little bump in 1985-1990 correlates with the reign of Gorbachev. He implemented policy that gave more autonomy to enterprises (less state control), and allowed for foreign trade (opening the market, again less state control). This included giving way more autonomy to the collectivized farms, as well as allowing for private farms for both personal use and for sale on the market - in other words, he de-collectivized. Given that the central authority in the USSR was the state, you could also say the central authority has less control, and thus they decentralized.

Compare this the the US life expectancy of time. It’s much less volatile for one thing, it’s a very steady incline. They also actually did reach a life expectancy of 70 by 1970, they had it by 1965 in fact.

.

Honestly, we totally agree on quite a bit here. We obviously both don’t advocate for Stalin himself, and we totally agree decentralization is a good thing. It’s just strange to me that in the case of the USSR you don’t see how the act of decentralization was literally being less strict on collective control and more lenient on private control - in other words, being less strict on socialist policy and being a little more lenient on private ownership.

it’s also important to acknowledge that many parts of the USSR did work

It’s also important to acknowledge which parts worked, it’s also important to acknowledge why they worked. When farmers were given private ownership, they had more freedom of choice in how to manage it, which is really important to have on farms for a myriad of reasons I can get into if you want. But in any case, they were better able to feed themselves as well as bring more product to market. Surplus on food and freedom of distribution means less hunger.

However, this cannot be meaningfully achieved in a top-down system like Capitalism.

Take farming as an example since it’s on topic. Capitalism is the private ownership of the means of production. In 1985-1990 USSR most privately owned farms were small scale and personally managed. What’s more top down, a guy owning a plot of land and doing what he wants with it, or being assigned to work a plot by the regional agriculture authority, who answers to the ministry of agriculture, who answered to the council of ministers, who answered to the Communist Party leadership?

.

Private Property Rights require a state while public property does not

Public Property: something owned by the city, town, or state.

I understand that the line is blurry on whether public means “of the state” or “of the people”. For example, the Romans saw the state to be in service of the people, so “public works” were state works for the people. They also saw the republic as a government of the people, so state projects were of the people either way you take it. This is exactly the same in our democracy, public spaces are managed by the state, on behalf of the people, but the democratic state is also a government of the people, so it’s effectively redundant in the modern context.

In any case, I don’t exactly think the distinction matters. As soon as a large group of people (the public) see the need to come together and make decisions and how to manage certain things and/or how to cooperate to get something done, a government is formed. When the Romans did this, they literally didn’t have a distinctive word for it, which is why they basically just called it the “public thing”, the group that handled public decision making. The nature of the Roman “public thing” swayed in and out of meaning of for the people, by the people, in service of the people, in command of the people, and it was never exclusive to one of those things.

Private property demonstrably does not require a state to exist, because that’s not always how property rights are handled. In this early period of Rome, the state could purchase and grant rights, but so could private citizens. If the people of Rome wanted a plot of land to themselves, the legal way to do so would be through a legitimate exchange with a private owner. Property rights are granted by whoever holds the property rights, private or public. Modern nations technically own the land they claim, which is why they grant access.

.

The far more important distinction are the things that which the people don’t decide need collective cooperation. That’s what we call “private”. To be privately controlled, you can’t be under the control of the collective or the control of the state, which is precisely why “private” is the antithesis of “public”. In the context of Rome, centralization would be to make it part of the “public thing”. So, if the people and senate of Rome decided to bring the whole market under the control of the people the way they did the army and roads, they would have been both centralizing control of the market and technically socialist, as the means of production would been publicly controlled. The USSR was socialist for exactly that reason.

Cowbee,

You’re continuing to compare a fully developed superpower that never had skin in WWII with a developing country the rest of the world tried to oppose at every step, that’s still completely disingenuous. The graph was volatile because the USSR was founded in Civil War, had a famine in the 30s during the horribly botched collectivization of agriculture, then had their bread basket invaded during WWII while they took on the majority of combat against the Nazis. After that, steady!

Decentralization is firmly a Socialist ideal, and is incompatible with Capitalism. Capitalism requires that workers have no power, otherwise it wouldn’t exist.

You then go on to completely butcher the definitions of Socialism by assuming it means state control, rather than collective control, of the means of production. State control is merely one path of Socialism.

Private Property requires a monopoly of violence to enforce, ie a state. You cannot have private property without threat of violence via a state, even your example proves this.

All in all, you’re frustratingly bad at arguing anything coherent, and it’s clear you don’t actually care about proper definitions.

HardNut,

had a famine in the 30s during the horribly botched collectivization of agriculture

which implies that non-collectivized agriculture was doing a good job considering the significant upswing in the 20s. After the civil war, non-collectivized farms were doing a good job.

All in all, you’re frustratingly bad at arguing anything coherent, and it’s clear you don’t actually care about proper definitions.

This response makes me think you didn’t really read my comment very closely considering I literally explain the etymology of the word “public”. Socialism is the public ownership of the means of production, and there’s good reason to consider that state ownership given the history of the word and its use over time. I don’t think I’m incoherent, I just think you don’t understand, otherwise you’d actually address my comment instead of restating your position and implying I’m stupid for not agreeing. I honest to god do recommend taking my comment a bit more seriously and rereading it. Really try to look at what I’m telling you, and if you disagree, I’d love to see you actually point out what’s wrong with my comment.

You’re never going to convince me I’m out of line here unless I can tell from your response you actually took in what I was saying, because honestly, you really didn’t have to read much of what I said to generate the response you made.

possiblylinux127,

They in fact do not. One can be conservative and support FOSS. Saying that is a over generalization

Cowbee,

Leftism is about collective ownership of the means of production, whereas Capitalism is concerned with individual ownership.

Supporting FOSS over Capitalism is a leftist take.

possiblylinux127,

I don’t think you understand what FOSS is. Its not a political ideology. Honestly neither is communism as it is a fringe belief.

Cowbee,

FOSS isn’t a political ideology itself, no. That’s like saying Mutual Aid or Worker Democracy aren’t political ideologies. Technically correct, but that wasn’t the point, all of those are leftist structures.

Communism is a political ideology, and I don’t think it can be globally considered fringe. Perhaps in the US, but not globally.

possiblylinux127,

Well anyways I don’t think it should be allowed in this community. This isn’t a communist community.

Cowbee,

Everything is political, where do you draw the line? Where it doesn’t align with your views?

AVincentInSpace,

Well I don’t like it so it shouldn’t be here.

tell me you’re a conservative without saying it lmao

possiblylinux127,

Honestly we should just refrain from making political commentary. We all now that extreme conservatives are just as bad.

AVincentInSpace, (edited )

WHEN WILL YOU PEOPLE LEARN THAT EVERYTHING IS POLITICAL?

The libre software movement has the stated goal of making a political statement. Your decision to exclude discussion of a certain ideology in a certain forum is itself a political decision. It is turtles all the way down.

possiblylinux127,

Call it what you wish but I will never associate libre software with communism

uis,
@uis@lemmy.world avatar

Capitalism is concerned with individual ownership.

So USA is not capitalism? Because it is country with most anti-individual and anti-ownership practices.

Cowbee,

It’s one of the most Capitalist countries on the planet, and is filled with individual Capital Owners that employ Proletarians.

uis, (edited )
@uis@lemmy.world avatar

Then explain patent trolls and general “you will own nothing and pay for it”.

Cowbee,

Capitalism.

lugal, to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes

When the program is free, it’s socialism. The more free the program is, the more socialism it is. When the source is free, it’s communism.

MacNCheezus,
@MacNCheezus@lemmy.today avatar

Ironically, the freer the source, the less communism.

GPL: our source is free and yours must be too.
BSD/MIT: our source is free and you can’t blame us.
Public domain: do whatever the hell you want.

slipperydippery, to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes

This is great, where are the rest?

BeefPiano,

This is a photoshop, the original from Modern Humorist said something like “when you download MP3s, you’re downloading communism” and it was attributed to the RIAA instead of Microsoft.

Source: I owned the print of this a couple decades ago, and you can probably find Modern Humorist on archive.org

slipperydippery,

Thanks!

fenrasulfr, to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes
@fenrasulfr@lemmy.world avatar

Well at least they are slighty more open to open source software since it make them money.

0x4E4F,

They’re just making face, doing what is necessary to prove they’re not evil, cuz open source software is in now.

SquishMallow,

I highly doubt that. They are open-sourcing a small suite because it is economical to do so. Closed source means constantly having to re-train newcomers. Normalizing VsCode and friends will go a long ways. Same thing Google did with their IT certs.

frezik,

Nah, nobody cares about their monopoly anymore. They got outmaneuvered on mobile, and they’re stuck being a desktop OS while the rest of the market moves around them.

Happens a lot with monopolies. IBM was the biggest name in mainframes, but their PC division made a standard that other companies would take and run.

Microsoft wouldn’t have put as much effort into WSL if it was just performative.

0x4E4F,

Still, everything enterprise related or video/audio revolves around them (and Macs of course). That is one of their biggest assets now, as well as the “a perscription OS” spin they’re trying to pull on Windows. Also, their subscription services, people that do all sorts of businesses use them a lot.

GnothiSeauton,

Even enterprise stuff has largely moved away from Microsoft. They are still dominant in some areas like the business desktop space/office 365/active directory, but ‘enterprise’ apps running on Windows Server (and associated stuff like IIS) with tight Microsoft integrations are a thing of the past.

0x4E4F,

Yeah, that’s what I meant by enterprise use, not IIS. And they’re still dominant on the audio/video production market. Basically, every aspect that is not just your everyday browsing or small office work.

c0mbatbag3l,
@c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world avatar

Did IBM really invent the OSI model on their own? I thought the IEEE standardized that with help from programmers all over the industry?

frezik, (edited )

Hmm? I wasn’t talking about OSI.

If you’re thinking BIOS, that was originally IBM proprietary stuff.

OSI started from a lot of telecom companies, who inflicted their silly ideas of Presentation and Session layers on us all.

c0mbatbag3l,
@c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world avatar

No I’m definitely thinking of the OSI model lol

What are you talking about, then? What IBM standard did everyone else adopt?

BeardedGingerWonder,

I’ll go out on a limb here and assume they’re talking about the IBM PC.

frezik,

BIOS.

They recognized that PCs were the next big thing and needed one of their own. Large companies don’t move fast, and IBM is certainly no exception, but they had to move fast now. So they took a bunch of off the shelf components that anyone else could have bought and called it their PC.

Everything except the BIOS. It regulated how the OS interacts with the hardware. Almost to the point where you could argue DOS isn’t an OS at all, but just a thin command line layer over the BIOS, plus a simple minded file system.

Anyway, some people at Compaq make a cleanroom implementation of the BIOS and release an “IBM PC compatible”. This quickly becomes the basis of everything we call a PC today. But IBM doesn’t get to profit off it in the long run. They sold off their PC division decades ago.

The show “Halt and Catch Fire” has an excellent fictional example of the reverse engineering process.

0x4E4F,

Actually, it’s not that silly, TCP/IP is built on that model, so are many other protocols. Though yes, it can be done better.

frezik,

TCP/IP does not have a concept of Presentation or Session. Everything above it is just “Application”, which is more sensible. There isn’t much criticism to be had of layer 4 down, but when they got to layer 5 and 6, they were telecom people sticking their nose in software architecture. You can write networked applications with those layers if you like. I’ve seen it done, and it’s fine. There are also plenty of other ways to architect it that also work just fine.

0x4E4F, (edited )

There isn’t much criticism to be had of layer 4 down, but when they got to layer 5 and 6, they were telecom people sticking their nose in software architecture.

That is true.

But, you have to understand, back when OSI was made, the only thing which could benefit from it was telecom and banking… there were no PCs as we know them today. It’s no surprise that OSI caters mostly to telecom software and needs.

And you could always just use the model up until layer 4, it’s pretty good up until layer 4, and just do whatever you like after that… if you’re developing your own protocol for something that is.

SpookySnek,

Microsoft open-sourced all of dotnet core, which is arguably the largest and most well-maintained (with exceptions) collection of tools/platforms for developers that exsists to date. So, I don’t really agree that they’re just “making face”

Adanisi, (edited )
@Adanisi@lemmy.zip avatar

They’re absolutely just “making face”. For each thing Microsoft frees, how many more are proprietary shit? Visual Studio, proprietary. Windows, proprietary. Etc.

RGB3x3, (edited ) to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes

A reminder from Microsoft… While he’s using a Mac?

0x4E4F, (edited )

Balmer? Yes, I believe that was one of the biggest blunders at a conference he was attending 😂.

Chocrates,

But the dude is programming with the Communist devil so he is the one doing the communism! They need a windows toting jesus to surf in with sunglasses and a guitar or something

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

Preferably on the back of a dinosaur.

shasta,

No Mac. That’s one of those cool colorful monitors from 1999

robotopera,

Those were iMacs…

shasta,

Maybe the first ones. I definitely had one for my windows 98 PC.

Neon, (edited ) to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes

No. Foss Software is peak Capitalism.

Socialism means a central bureau decides what is needed and worked on

Meanwhile Capitalism is a System of decentralization

Foss Software isn’t being centrally ordered because someone higher up decides it is needed. First the need arises and then the “Market” (The Developers out there) create a Solution to fullfill this need.

This Market, this pool of Developers is decentralized in smaller Groups. And that’s good that way. I don’t want someone to decide which Software gets developed. Not some CEO and definitely not some Bureaucrat.

I mean, the F in FOSS allows decentralized usage and a lot of People in the FOSS-Community prefer decentralized Solutions

possiblylinux127, (edited )

gold

Take my gold

Cowbee, (edited )

Wrong on several fronts.

Socialism means workers collectively own the means of production, and it isn’t synonymous with central planning. Concepts like ParEcon, Worker Councils, Mutual Aid, and so forth reinforce this decentralized structure.

Capitalism is similarly not a system of decentralization but of many centralized islands. Each individual capitalist entity is very centralized in structure, more so than a system of Socialist entities, such as Syndicalism or Market Socialism.

FOSS itself rejects the profit motive and markets, and therefore is the antithesis of capitalism. Capitalism relies on private ownership, the profit motive, and IP protections, all of which FOSS abolishes.

Truthfully, the fact that you don’t want some CEO or bureaucrat deciding what gets produced unilaterally is precisely why your views are actually that of a leftist. You desire more democratization of production, a Socialist ideal to the core!

The fact that FOSS is based on non-profit decentralization is the very reason FOSS communities are dominated by leftists.

HardNut,

Socialism means workers collectively own the means of production, and it isn’t synonymous with central planning.

This can only be true if you stop thinking at the end of the sentence, without reading into any of the implications, or any circumstantial cause and effect.

If the workers collectively own everything, then that means that every worker has just as much right as anyone else to make decisions on how the process plays out. This means that the group has to come up with a way to make decisions. Since the group has to make a decision, and everybody has a right to make decisions, the group is effectively making decisions on behalf of those in the group.

If the workers collectively own everything, then that means they have to work together and organize to get things done. This means that the group has to come up with a way to organize. This means that the group will be deciding on behalf of those in the group what work is done by who.

If the workers collectively own everything, that means the workers have to decide what rules or laws to follow, and how to enforce them. So now the group has to decide by what convention it’ll hold its members accountable. If it wants to hold members accountable, it implicitly has the power to do so.

A group with decision making power that enforces law among its members is a central authority.

A central authority with power over the market and all decision making is central planning.

Your description of capitalism legitimately sounds like mental gymnastics. You can call anything centralized if you reduce the context to only itself. That is dishonest, the context here is the market. If a market is centrally planned, then all aspects of the market need to be centrally planned by the same unit. That’s what central planning means. A disunited group of private entities all planning things for themselves is absolutely not an example of central planning.

Cowbee,

If Workers democratically and decentrally decide things, it’s central planning, and not only is it central planning, it’s more centralized than if they had no say whatsoever a la Capitalism?

I’m sorry, I don’t subscribe to mental gymnastics like that. I prefer decentralization and democratization over letting the few control everything unopposed except by each other.

HardNut, (edited )

I didn’t say the workers decided things, I said they had a right to, and then alluded to the diplomatic issues that creates… In fact, I heavily implied they can’t realistically make decisions when I said the group decides things on their behalf.

Central Planned Economy: an economy where decisions on what to produce, how to produce and for whom are taken by the government in a centrally managed bureaucracy.

In socialism, the market is controlled by the state. This fits the definition of central planning perfectly.

In capitalism, the market is not controlled by a centralized bureaucracy.

Cowbee,

You followed an arbitrary logical chain to depict one form of Socialism, yes.

In Capitalism, the market is controlled by Capitalists, who represent a minor fraction of the population. In Socialism, the economy is controlled by everyone.

sebinspace, to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes

Hey Microsoft, your GitHub is showing

Artyom,

If github is still showing, you must be logged in.

diemartin,

github.com/rnicrosoft

(At some point that username existed: don’t know when it was killed)

LainOfTheWired, (edited ) to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes
@LainOfTheWired@lemy.lol avatar

Can we keep mainstream politics out of here please. I’m sick of them getting shoved into everything.

Cassa,
@Cassa@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

everything is political.

Cowbee,

Is Communism “mainstream” now?

Joking aside, politics are everywhere, and Lemmy is always going to be more political than reddit, as choosing Lemmy over Reddit is almost purely a choice based on political values.

SkyeStarfall,

FOSS is political.

0x4E4F,

As much as I’d hate to admit it, everything is politics… talking with your wife is politics.

SkyeStarfall,

Marriage is a legal institution codified into law, so… Yes. Especially when it comes to who gets to marry and how.

0x4E4F,

Getting married is the easy part. Staying married is the hard part 😂.

jimmycrackcrack, to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes

On an old coloured plastic iMac too.

makingStuffForFun,
@makingStuffForFun@lemmy.ml avatar

Herecy

HardNut,

Heracles

Mistrrhappy,

Heresy

makingStuffForFun,
@makingStuffForFun@lemmy.ml avatar

Hear say

jaybone,

Hennessy

Zehzin,
@Zehzin@lemmy.world avatar

Hershey

FuglyDuck,
@FuglyDuck@lemmy.world avatar

Those things were so hideous… and I actually thought they were cool at the time… well. Except OS9 sucked balls.

The power mac versions with the pull-to-open side were cooler. Mostly because there was a space above the PSU had just enough space to accommodate a tub of cottage cheese.

Pop it in on a Friday…. You’d be having class…. Elsewhere on Monday…

Zink, to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes

Talk shit on FOSS, by comparing it to communism like it’s a bad thing, on Lemmy.

Now there’s a message this place will love, lol.

Cowbee,

It’s clearly a red scare parody.

Zink,

Of course, and it’s an old image too, but it still amused me thinking of the contrast between the message and the current audience.

Cowbee,

There isn’t, the message itself is satire. The audience is precisely who the message is for, it’s making fun of Microsoft comparing FOSS to Communism, parodying red scare propaganda.

Unless I’m misunderstanding you, of course.

jaybone,

Trying to explain satire is communism

KreekyBonez,

it seems like a pro-communist programming message to me. the red dude looks super cool and supportive.

riodoro1,

Yeah, he’s probably giving mad tips to the dev and he looks happy, so we know the red dude is not just a dickhead.

Lmaydev, to linuxmemes in Steve Balmer quotes

Microsoft loves open source nowadays.

People do a huge amount of their work for free.

They’re also heavily invested in Linux for the cloud. So any work done there helps them.

0x4E4F,

Steve Balmer wasn’t as keen on it…

palordrolap,

With Microsoft, any love shown could well be the Embrace part of the strategy that will lead to Extend and then Extinguish just as soon as they can figure those parts out. They might already have a plan.

The fact they've been able to turn things to their advantage so far does not mean they don't have such a plan. Or won't ever have one.

Lmaydev, (edited )

Seems unlikely with how they work now. You also can’t really extinguish foss.

.Net is cross platform and open source as well now.

Maybe if Linux becomes a competitor in the desktop market. But I don’t see that happening any time soon.

CheshireSnake, to privacy in Looks like Facebook is following youtube with anti-adblock measures.
@CheshireSnake@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

Your ad blocker is blocking posts from friends

Thank fucking god

Ronnie,

My Facebook is hardly even friends these days. It’s basically ads, suggested posts, and posts in groups. Maybe because none of my friends really post anymore, I dunno.

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