I’m low key annoyed about the whole “it’s a social construct” to mean “it’s not real”. Social constructs are real as fuck and they can fuck you up good.
The economy is a social construct. Days of the week are a social construct. I still need to show up to work on Monday morning so I can give my socially constructed fiat currency to the grocery shop in order not to fucking starve.
No shit Sherlock. But it’s pretty telling that you pick DEI efforts to rage against and not all the actual ways capitalism fucks the entire planet and everyone on it.
It makes it kinda hard to believe you are acting in good faith jk.
I’m not a Wayland fan by any stretch, but I’ve come to the same confusion you did. And so has almost everyone else. Which is the real point of my comment I guess.
Bare repos with multiple users are a bit of a hassle because of file permissions. It works, and works well, as long as you set things up right and have clear processes. But god help you if you don’t.
I find that with multiple users the safest way is to set up/use a service. Plus you get a lot of extra features like issue tracking and stuff.
I definitely do not count it against them as long as they know how to human at the interview. I just review the code as I would any repo.
The only thing is that with regular projects I tend to go “I noticed on your GitHub you have project X that uses technology Y, etc etc”. With H projects I just go “do you have experience with Y” and let him choose how much he wants to share about the project. So far they remain vague on the non technical details and I let them leave with their dignity intact.
So, ranked, way ahead of candidates without visible projects, but slightly behind people with projects we can discuss in detail in front of the people from HR ;)
How is this meaningfully different than using Deb packages? Or building from source without inspecting the build commands? Or even just building from source without auditing the source?
In the end docker files are just instructions for running software to set up other software. Just like every other single shell script or config file in existence since the mid seventies.
Apparently I was unclear, I was referring to the security implications of using different manifestations of other people’s code. Those are rather similar.
I’d recommend reading up on docker and containerization. It is not a script for setting up software.
I was referring specifically to docker files. Those are almost to the letter scripts for setting up software.
if that’s what you’re thought is then you really don’t understand containerization and I recommend taking some learnings on it.
I find your attitude not just uncharitable, but also rude.
Funny thing is that over here in Europe the ice cream machines seem to work almost all the time. I understand that it’s because they use a different brand of machines, but I’m not sure about the details.
I read a comment on here some time ago where the person said they were using cloudflared to expose some of their self-hosted stuff to the Internet so they can access it remotely....
Let's goooooo (mander.xyz)
ELI5 the whole Wayland vs X11 going on.
Title
I love my Gitea. Any tips and tricks? (sh.itjust.works)
Why docker
Hi! Question in the title....
I was able to learn React though (lemmy.world)
Random application segfaults on Arch
Hi everyone,...
The machine is always broken (lemmy.sdf.org)
What's wrong with using cloudflared?
I read a comment on here some time ago where the person said they were using cloudflared to expose some of their self-hosted stuff to the Internet so they can access it remotely....
Great job (lemmus.org)
Subwoofer (lemmy.world)
In the wake of the story about billionaire Bill Ackman
https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/b6149070-d0ab-4620-9817-aad34ae631f9.jpeg