aport

@aport@programming.dev

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aport,

This is the setup for me too. It’s been fantastic

aport,

I’m amazed people are still using Mercurial. I worked on a few hg projects about a decade ago and it wasn’t a very good experience. It was easy for people who used subversion, but if you were even halfway familiar with git you just missed a lot of functionality.

aport,

This makes no sense because dbus uses unix domain sockets.

It sounds like you don’t actually understand what dbus is.

aport,

“Bro just use sockets lol” completely misses the point. When you decide you want message based IPC, you need to then design and implement:

  • Message formatting
  • Service addressing
  • Data marshalling
  • Subscriptions and publishing
  • Method calling, marshalling of arguments and responses
  • Broadcast and 1:1 messaging

And before you know it you’ve reimplemented dbus, but your solution is undocumented, full of bugs, has no library, no introspection, no debugging tools, can only be used from one language, and in general is most likely pure and complete garbage.

aport,

Ukraine would do it with the help of several other Western nations. A definite team effort!

aport,

Tim has always been the knockoff version of John Carmack.

aport,

Broadcasting calls is kinda looked down upon in the birding community

aport,

Just because I like looking at breeding tits doesn’t make me a pervert 😤

GNOME Sees Progress On Variable Refresh Rate Setting, Adding Battery Charge Control (www.phoronix.com)

As pointed out in This Week in GNOME, there’s been some continued work on Variable Rate Refresh for the GNOME desktop. The VRR setting within GNOME Settings continues to be iterated on as the developers iron out how they’d like to present the Variable Rate Refresh setting for users. The developers have been discussing how to...

aport,

Lol

aport,

I find GNOME’s “must be perfect” approach to accepting new code counterintuitive.

One of the largest benefits of having a clean architecture is increased velocity and extensibility. What’s the point in nitpicking over perfection when it takes literally years to merge a feature, arguably one considered basic and essential by today’s standards?

KDE is on the other side of this pendulum, integrating everything and resulting in a disjointed, buggy disaster.

Where’s the middle way? It used to be XFCE. What is it now?

aport,

Probably because one is for memes and the other isn’t

My few remaining gripes with linux

It’s mostly libinput. Why the hell can’t I easily change scroll speed on Gnome and not on KDE? Why does gnome have a simple tool (gnome tweaks) to change the trackpad cooldown to change the time trackpad doesn’t work as a substitute for good palm rejection and KDE doesn’t? Why is it a bit of a pain in both to change...

aport,

Fittingly, Fedora 39 arrives 20 years and 1 day after Fedora Core 1 was released November 6, 2003.

Time really sneaks up on you doesn’t it

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