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hperrin, to opensource in Don't be that guy.

I have been testing with the original reporter of the problem. This guy came in, said he had the same problem, then cursed at me.

hperrin, (edited ) to opensource in Don't be that guy.

Yes, and I have a package.json that lists dependencies and the versions I test with. You can force a different version though. I don’t think that’s what happened here. I’m guessing it’s a version of some dependency that should work, because it was released as a minor version within the range I specified, but doesn’t actually work.

It could also be an issue with the build system/bundler, which I can’t really control either.

hperrin, to opensource in Don't be that guy.

It’s a frontend JavaScript UI library. I can’t control what other dependencies people install alongside my library, or even whether they follow my library’s dependency list.

hperrin, to piracy in Recent Nebula content

Sign up, watch videos, cancel account. Or look for pirated versions, but Nebula is one of the places that has yet to turn shitty.

hperrin, to comicstrips in No escape

Easy, just open it with your teeth, then your hands will stay clean.

hperrin, to linuxmemes in Linux laptop recommendation thread🐧💻

Fingerprint reader and webcam standing by

hperrin, to opensource in How do I make contributors to my project transfer copyright to me?

It would mean that the owner could take that code and make it closed source. They could do literally anything they wanted with it, because they would own the copyright.

hperrin, (edited ) to opensource in How do I make contributors to my project transfer copyright to me?

If you want that, you’ll get fewer contributors, but just make that explicitly clear in your pull request template.

Personally, I would never contribute to a project where the maintainer demanded I transfer copyright ownership of my contributions. I also wouldn’t use a project that did that, and would advise other people to not use that project either.

hperrin, to linuxmemes in Year of the Diagonal Linux Desktop, y'all

Only if I also get a dodecahedral phone.

hperrin, to linuxmemes in Year of the Diagonal Linux Desktop, y'all

I’m just sitting here patiently waiting for hexagonal displays.

hperrin, to lemmyshitpost in One possible caveat of using an open source search engine alternative instead of Google

Ah ok.

hperrin, to lemmyshitpost in One possible caveat of using an open source search engine alternative instead of Google

What am I looking at here?

hperrin, to privacy in Does Gboard spell checker phone home on Android?

The spell checker uses a local dictionary. There are other things that it phones home for. IIRC, voice to text is one of them.

hperrin, to selfhosted in PSA: The Docker Snap package on Ubuntu sucks.

Now I know better. No more Ubuntu Server.

hperrin, (edited ) to selfhosted in PSA: The Docker Snap package on Ubuntu sucks.

I have a 20TB RAID array that I use for a number of services mounted at /data. I would like Nextcloud to have access to more than the 128GB available to /home. I’m not willing to move my data mount into /home and reconfigure the ~5 other services that use it just to work around some stupid Snap limitation. Who knows whether Snap even can access data across filesystems if they’re mounted in home. I wouldn’t put it past the Snap devs to fall down on that point either.

Yes, Docker clearly needs access to all files. It is meant for running server software, and server software is supposed to be flexible in its setup. To me, this limitation makes it completely unusable. Nextcloud is only the first service that needed access to that directory. I’ll also be running MinIO there for blob storage for a Mastodon server. I’ll probably move Jellyfin into a Docker container, and it’ll need access too.

The fact that this giant issue with Snap is not made clear is my biggest problem with it. I had to figure it out myself over the course of two hours when there are zero warnings or error messages explaining it. What an absolutely unnecessary waste of time, when it could have warned me at install that if I wanted a completely functional version of Docker, I should use the apt package.

I will never use any Snap package again. This was such a bad experience that I probably won’t even be using Ubuntu Server going forward. I already use Fedora for desktop. And the fact that a few people here are basically saying it’s my fault for not already knowing the limitations imposed on Snap packages is just making it more obvious that Ubuntu has become a toxic distro. It’s sad, because Ubuntu got me into Linux back with Hardy Heron 8.04. I’ve been running Ubuntu servers since 9.10. I used to be excited every six months for the new Ubuntu release. It’s sad to see something you loved become awful.

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