• 29 Posts
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Joined 5 years ago
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Cake day: May 31st, 2020

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  • Ephera@lemmy.mltoOpensource@programming.devWhat's up with FUTO?
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    50 minutes ago

    Damn, I’ve had technological disagreements with Mr. DeVault in the past. Obviously, I did not assume those to mean I’d disagree with him on everything, but it still feels surreal to read an entire post where I’m fully on board with everything he writes (and appreciate all the info I did not know).

    Cool to see that he’s fighting the good fight.











  • Ephera@lemmy.mltoScience Memes@mander.xyzHonestly Bizarre
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    3 days ago

    Excuse me, it’s smoothies that are an abomination, if anything.

    You’ve got beautiful fruit where each bite tastes and feels different, which have long fibers with structural integrity to prevent your stomach from ingesting the sugar all at once, and then you decide:
    Nah, I’d rather have fruit soup, where the whole thing just has a singular monotonous taste. And where there’s nothing to chew. Just sign me up for the retirement home now.


  • Ephera@lemmy.mltoScience Memes@mander.xyzHonestly Bizarre
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    3 days ago

    I believe, it’s a US thing. This is a quote from the official Dietary Guidelines for Americans (DGA):

    Other Vegetables: All other fresh, frozen, and canned vegetables, cooked or raw: for example, asparagus, avocado, bamboo shoots, beets, bitter melon, Brussels sprouts, cabbage (green, red, napa, savoy), cactus pads (nopales), cauliflower, celery, chayote (mirliton), cucumber, eggplant, green beans, kohlrabi, luffa, mushrooms, okra, onions, radish, rutabaga, seaweed, snow peas, summer squash, tomatillos, and turnips.

    Source: https://www.dietaryguidelines.gov/sites/default/files/2021-03/Dietary_Guidelines_for_Americans-2020-2025.pdf (page 28)

    I’ve read elsewhere that the reason for the DGA to conflate them, is because mushrooms have comparable nutrients to vegetables. So, from a dietary and regulatory viewpoint, it makes some amount of sense. But yeah, I feel like you could have just had a category “vegetables & mushrooms”.


  • There’s no way they actually checked that it works. It includes code for:

    • XDG
    • GNOME
    • “GNOME_old”
    • KDE

    Verifying this would mean logging into several different desktop environments.

    It’s also extremely fragile code, running external commands and filtering through various files. There just is no good API on Linux for querying whether the desktop environment is using a dark theme, so it’s doing absolutely inane shit that no sane developer would type out.

    Because it’s a maintenance nightmare. Because they almost certainly don’t actually need to solve this. That’s software development 101, to not write code that you don’t actually need. But apparently some devs never got the memo that this is because of the maintenance cost, not because you weren’t able to generate the code up until now.


  • Ephera@lemmy.mltoProgrammer Humor@lemmy.mlDiligence
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    5 days ago

    Yeah, I feel this one. We currently have significantly less dev velocity than the velocity at which requirements come in. So, unless something actually is the highest priority *right now*, there’s a pretty low chance of it ever being worked on.

    And then, yeah, I can be “professional” and say that we’ll work on it when we find time for it. That’s technically not a lie.
    But we both know that it’s not going to happen, so it’s actually better for the customer to take that reality at face value and find another solution.


  • Ah, so you’ve scripted a whole bunch of stuff with YUM. Then you automatically have the downside that switching over could incur hours of work.

    As much as the software developer in me wants to encourage you to use DNF (or an abstraction like pkcon) for newer scripts, in case they want to remove YUM one day, I get not wanting to deal with two separate tools.

    In my head, switching over was trivial, i.e. just typing D, N, F instead of Y, U, M, because that was my experience when I switched over way back when I was still a freshly hatched penguin.


  • I’ve always liked Zypper (and if I remember correctly, DNF was also fine), purely because it feels sane in everything it does.

    We love to make a religion out of them, but a package manager is ultimately just a secondary tool. It installs other tools, which are what you’re actually interested in using.
    So, I shouldn’t need to learn a scramble of letters to achieve that. I shouldn’t need to think about refreshing the repository listing. The less I need to worry about instructing the package manager, the better.