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Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: May 31st, 2020

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  • I’d say, I’m primarily a very low volume gamer, so I don’t play a lot of games, and if I do, I don’t play them for long. And that certainly makes it easy to look at the news of a game releasing and to think, yeah, that’s probably neat, but if I’m buying another game then it’d be Undertale or Baba Is You or such, and it definitely doesn’t look as neat as those…




  • For a project called “Potato Peeler”, I’ll put it into a structure like this:

    ~/Projects/Tools/Potato-Peeler/potato-peeler/
    

    Tools/ is just a rough category. Other categories are, for example, Games/ and Music/, because I also do gamedev and composing occasionally.

    Then the capitalized Potato-Peeler/ folder, that’s for me to drop in all kinds of project-related files, which I don’t want to check into the repo.

    And the lower-case potato-peeler/ folder is the repo then. Seeing other people’s structures, maybe I’ll rename that folder to repo/, and if I have multiple relevant repos for the Project, then make it repo-something.

    I also have a folder like ~/Projects/Tools/zzz/ where I’ll move dormant projects. The “zzz” sorts nicely to the bottom of the list.



  • I find that difficult. Aside from code reviews, often times your job as a maintainer is:

    • getting a refactor or code cleanup in while everyone’s asleep
    • shuffling commits around between branches
    • fixing the CI toolchain
    • rolling back or repairing a broken change
    • unfucking the repo
    • fixing a security vulnerability

    A required review slows all of these tasks to a crawl. I do agree that the kernel is important enough that it might be worth the trade-off.
    But at the same, I do not feel like I could do my (non-kernel) maintainer job without direct commit access…




  • I used to have this kid as a colleague (he was 17 at the time), who had been primed by his parents to be a nationalist.

    One of the times, he was completely bewildered by my stance was when I said that even if I cared about having things in common with other humans, I feel like I have more in common with the folks just across the border than those who live several hundred kilometers away within the same border.

    You could really see the cogs in his brain churning, trying to grok how you can have things in common with team B, when you’ve been assigned to team A.





  • It annoys me so much, because it works.

    There’s more people who have a vague understanding that “open-source” is good than people who understand software licenses, and nevermind people who actually go to compile the supposedly-open-source software to see what’s included.

    And if multiple people tell you that LLaMA is open-source, at some point you’re just gonna assume that’s true rather than check the license/code yourself.

    Hell, there’s even absolute dickholes which post their own definition of “open-source” like they’re the fucking OSI themselves: https://futo.org/open-source-definition/
    But because a popular YouTuber is behind that scam, you now have fanboys putting into question whether the definition from the OSI, which literally coined the term by publishing the definition, is actually the correct one. Absolutely incredible.

    Edit: While researching for the comment below, I found this page on the FUTO website, which says their open-source definition was just a very funny parody: https://futo.org/about/futo-statement-on-opensource/
    Why they don’t take that open-source definition offline then, or preface it with a disclaimer, I do not know. And I think their reasoning for the parody is shit, but make up your own mind.


  • Ephera@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlSome basic questions about Linux
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    5 days ago

    A distro is a complete installable operating system (+ a set of software repositories from which you can install updates and new software).
    Many distributions (or their flavors/spins) will come with a default desktop environment and then usually also apply some distro-appropriate theming to that desktop environment.
    If you look at screenshots of distributions, you’re likely just looking at screenshots of their themed default desktop environment.

    And a desktop environment is essentially the GUI of your OS.
    It includes software such as the panel/taskbar, the application menu, the systray, the audio system, icons, a login screen etc… It also typically comes with a set of default applications, such as a file manager, a terminal emulator, a text editor etc…
    In a sense, the desktop environment contains essentially everything that differentiates a desktop OS from a server OS (the latter is usually just a terminal, without graphical interface).




  • That is a very good question. It all started as a dainty test setup, and I guess, we had lost the routine of always scripting hardware setups, because our previous project hadn’t required it.

    Obviously, the second-best time to start doing it is now, but I’d need to properly learn one of these first to be able to lead the way on that.
    Which collides with me not really wanting to use any of the ones I’ve experienced so far (Ansible, Puppet) in my freetime. 🫠