onlinepersona

@onlinepersona@programming.dev

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onlinepersona,

Both are inferior to IDEs when working locally on a software project 🤷

onlinepersona,

A vim user finding nano too difficult? Impressive.

onlinepersona,

Pirates have known this for decades. Buy DRMed media means you can lose access to it at any time. And these subscription services that limit access for paid services e.g as soon as you travel, access to certain stuff is lost, sometimes the access to the entire service is lost. Additionally, for some reason, pirated stuff often has better quality than paid stuff - it’s something I cannot fathom.

It was possible to get pirated 4k stuff as soon as it was released years ago, but most paid services couldn’t provide that. The biggest reason being you couldn’t buffer it. It only buffers a few seconds and then stops. Pirated stuff can be downloaded ahead of time and watched without buffering on a shit connection.

Fuck Netflix. What I hated most about them was they decided during the pandemic that too many people were watching stuff at 1080p, so they dropped the quality of streams to 720p. Lol. A great way to get people to pirate.

onlinepersona,

The dude on the right is some neckbeard who yells “RTFM” and “i use Arch btw ;)” IRL.

onlinepersona,

LMAO. That’s hilarious, babe.

onlinepersona,

You’ll be able to (among other things) open a merge request from another instance. Gitlab and other source forges require you to create an account on each instance you want to contribute to.

onlinepersona,

After I got a good job, I started donating to FOSS projects. They have already proven to be useful, unlike other crowdfunded projects in the inception stage. My bill for software now exists for opensource software, whereas when Windows was my main OS, it was non-existent. I love the option to give money. That’s freedom.

Fuck closed source software.

onlinepersona,

The speeds are as fast (or slow) as the slowest member in the chain. If most people who participate have slow connections, then most of the times it’ll be slow. But if the majority uses fast connections, then most chains/tunnels will be fast.

Again, it’s a chicken and egg problem: people who want fast downloads (and thus have fast pipes) won’t participate because it’s slow, but in doing so, they miss a chance to be part of the solution.

onlinepersona,

🤔 Why is that?

onlinepersona,
onlinepersona,

Curious if it’ll be opensource and mobile linux distro. If Amazon gets into the mobile linux game, the mobile phone market might change radically.

onlinepersona,

Then complaining that the license changes and gaslighting the group they steal from.

You’re right.

onlinepersona,

Install linux on the m2? Is Asahi linux good enough to daily drive already? 😮

(Also, why give Apple money?)

onlinepersona,

I’m not sure I follow. Won’t be sure of what?

onlinepersona,

Hmm… it would make sense for the linux vendors to get on the corporate list then, no?

onlinepersona,

Oh, OK. That makes sense. What a pity.

onlinepersona,

Sure, but why aren’t those vendors certified? Is it a lack of action on the vendor’s part? Is it a monetary problem where Canonical is demanding too much money and thus gatekeeping smaller vendors with smaller pockets from being certified? what is it?

onlinepersona,

They don’t compete, they sue or buy out.

onlinepersona,

Same. I’d love it if RISC-V came out with a competing chip.

onlinepersona,

Why tho? AMD’s 7840HS performs better at 35W and is x86_64.

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