Agreed. I was more on board before the Rust train lost some steam, but shit breaking all the time is worth putting an end to
안녕하세요!
Agreed. I was more on board before the Rust train lost some steam, but shit breaking all the time is worth putting an end to
Bad license though
I missed a few weeks of This week in Plasma, and while gaming yesterday on my laptop, I clicked the the battery and saw I could put it into Performance mode. Amazing surprise, I love KDE more every time!
No paywall:
Why would Slackware be insecure? The only trust is in the package manager, which comes with checksums and a maintainer who has a good track record
Everyone who says Linux is a viable alternative as a daily driver for things other than software dev or sys admin is just delusional.
But I don’t care about a single bullet point you shared?
Here’s someone’s blog doing it: https://www.da.vidbuchanan.co.uk/blog/netflix-on-asahi.html
Why do you care what’s in someone’s post history?
Eh. Attacking public transportation is not based. It only promotes car dependence
Not during the play though, only during analysis
Chess dot com tells me what opening I played
(Because Lord knows I don’t)
At Meta, if it’s an internal library, the team that maintains it updates all the code to use the latest version (that’s the advantage of a monorepo). As an aside, if your project broke because someone else touched your code, that’s on you for not writing better tests.
If it’s an external library, it either has a team responsible for it that does the above, otherwise it probably didn’t get updated since the day it was added.
The dumbest part is like, why? How much work is it really to keep goo.gl links around?
In 2018, Google wanted developers to move to Firebase Dynamic Links that detect the user’s platform and sends them to either the web or an app. Google ended up also shutting down that service for devs.
lmao
Updating a library in a monorepo means copying it all over and hoping the lib update didn’t break someone else’s code. Whereas updating a library normally would never break anything, and you can let people update on their own cadence
+1 about not having a true monorepo. Meta doesn’t have one either, despite how much we like to talk about it. So there’s still friction when you need to “canary” a change from one repo to another
We use them at Meta. It’s easier to interact with other parts of the codebase, but it doesn’t play well with libraries so you end up redoing a lot of stuff in-house.
I would only recommend a monorepo if you’re a company with at least 5,000+ engineers and can dedicate significant time to internal infra.
I’ve looked into CDE before but the support seems pretty poor compared to Chicago95
Someone else mentioned Qubes, but that is also a rather advanced distro for journalists and other users with a high threat model.
If you want to be able to use your computer as normal, but have a session with maximum privacy and route through Tor, Whonix is your best bet.
If you want something that you cannot possibly mess up, even at the cost of less functionality on your computer, TAILS is your best bet.
One thing no one mentioned is the license. I won’t touch BSD because if any BSD system gets good enough, a big corpo can fork it, get slightly ahead, and then never give back.
Source: MacOS