I'm a contractor and I use linux if that counts :D
If they want to fight hard, they just add the ads into the stream.
In a perfect world we wouldn't have ads.
I liked this discussion. However, I think both of you have different axioms. It's a pro-socialism vs pro-capitalism debate.
In capitalism, we need innovation to create new value. Or you can pollute water to sell water bottles which will have value now. It's up to citizens to decide what to restrict that was publicly available or what to innovate.
In socialism, the innovation is only happening where it needs to happen carefully planned and funded by the government.
I'm rather socialist, so I'd defend it:
Having a software with inability to modify is injustice, It's the same as polluting a water to sell it. Even if we need to pollute the water to sell it, it doesn't justify pollution.
You can't make a law for everything evil that corporations do. Social democracy is flawed inherently. We need direct decision power of people in those firms. Never gonna happen though.
I recently installed Nix alongside with Arch. I feel the same. After years of using Arch I spent two days to get everything configured the same as in my Arch, and I haven't finished it yet.
Don't buy a Mac. That's more limiting than a Windows. But yeah install linux.
yeah I'm a fucking idiot because I thought wrongly the redis' language...
I use rust only if we need performance, for small services. The industry does the same. People use node for backend but e.g. redis is in rust. It's a good tool if you use it for the right stuff.
EDIT: redis is not in rust, but e.g. aws writes many services in rust
Our views can be compatible. Endless os is quite limited right now, but if flathub would have xampp, for example, that would be easily the simplest way to run a webserver. However, every techy person prefers docker, me too. It's just not something that my mother can deal with. In general, linux is lacking these mother compatible apps where we have more advanced solution. Of course, I wouldn't recommend endless and others in the category if the goal is to run a webserver.
None of them good for non techy people. I wouldn't recommend mint. Gnome is the most friendly DE with pleasing defaults. There are many immutable flatpak distros coming with gnome. e.g.: Endless os which is pre installed on some asus laptops instead of Ubuntu for reason.
yep, there are a lot better racist jokes. this was tasteless soft shit.
Just a little. Big corporations ruin the working class just to eat more profit. I wish they had received less love.
By the way, I am an apple hater because I tried apple after years of using Linux and it was a true mess. Here's a story: I had to make an app building CICD pipeline and guess what? We had to run a macbook as a server because they fucking cannot share at least a VM for building. A CLI command brought up a GUI confirmation. How should I automate something that brings up a GUI. Garbage. Package management is horrible. Command line utilities was outdated. Case insensitive filesystem. Then Ruby...
And it's not enough that they are shit, but they are actively holding back innovation. They held back PWAs for example. And they shit on open-source. They are the definition of vendor lock-in.
They look good though.
It works between android and any linux distro through kde connect. It let's me do more than just clipboard sharing. e.g.: I could remote control my laser engraver through it.
Vertical integration and progressive company are good for Apple but for the consumer they are irrelevant I think.
Security is ok, privacy must be a joke, siri is listening, just like google. You have to be logged in to install an app from the store etc...
Pretty limited ui. Some might like it, some may don't, but they can't change nothing.
this is beautiful
EDIT: this was beautiful
Thanks for the question. GraphQL works with multiple languages, Cuple works only with Typescript. Despite this drawback this also gives you some advantages:
- The Request and Response types are auto-inferred from the endpoint you write
- Because the types are in Typescript you don't need to generate a client, you just simply use it with @cuple/client and get instant feedback.
- You don't have to learn another language. It's just typescript.
Practically it means less boilerplate and it let's you focus on the feature you write. Cuple is also not a query language, you get what the server sends you, it's more likely a type-safe FFI binding. With Cuple you can build a REST API, or anything similar to that with HTTP method, header, path, query, body, and you can use it type-safely.
Hey, I'm not a fan of advertising libraries, but otherwise, nobody will know them. I think this package is really spot on and solves many issues with current web technologies.
I'd like to continue this project. If you found it interesting please give some feedback.
github.com/fxdave/cuple intro: The Missing Type-Safety for Full-Stack
I have a plugin trait that includes some heavy types that would be almost impossible to wrap into a single API. It looks like this:
rust pub struct PluginContext<'a> { pub query: &'a mut String, pub gl_window: &'a GlutinWindowContext, flow: PluginFlowControl, pub egui_ctx: &'a Context, disable_cursor: bool, error: Option<String>, } pub trait Plugin { fn configure(&mut self, builder: ConfigBuilder) -> Result<ConfigBuilder, ConfigError> { Ok(builder) } fn search(&mut self, ui: &mut Ui, ctx: &mut PluginContext<'_>); fn before_search(&mut self, _ctx: &mut PluginContext<'_>) {} }
Here is what I considered:
- Keeping all plugins in-repo. This is what I do now, however I'd like to make a plugin that would just pollute the repository. So I need another option that would keep the plugins' freedom as it is right now, but with the possibility to move the plugin out to a separate repository.
- I tried to look into dynamic loading, and since rust doesn't have a stable ABI, I'm okay with restricting the rust versions for the plugin ecosystem. However, I don't think it's possible to compile this complex API into a dynamic lib and load it safely.
- I'm also ok with recompiling the app every time I need a new plugin, but I would like to load these plugins automatically, so I don't want to change the code every time I need a new plugin. For example, I imagine loading all plugins from a folder. Unfortunately, I didn't find an easy solution for this neither. I think I will write a build macro that checks the
~/.config/myapp/plugins
and include all of them into the repo.
Do you have any better ideas, suggestions? Thanks in advance.
(For context, this the app I'm writing about: https://github.com/fxdave/vonal-rust)
Hey everyone,
Just wanted to share my recent experience with gaming on my laptop. While playing CS:GO was manageable, CS2 was a different story. My laptop kept hitting thermal limits, causing frustrating performance drops. So, I decided to do it myself and repaste it.
I wrote a simple script to monitor my temperatures and frequencies: thermalog script.
The results speak for themselves: thermalog results.
I wasn't even near to thermal limit even when I played in 2K instead of FHD.
I used Arctic MX-6. (I bought liquid metal also as a backup plan, but luckily I don't need it). I'm more than happy with the results.
My laptop is four years old, I highly recommend giving it a go if you're facing similar thermal issues.
Happy gaming!
OpenSCAD library for destructuring furniture into planes - fxdave/woodworkers-lib
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/7885746
> I created a lib for designing cabinets. I'm not a woodworker, but I can design some for myself and I found this lib useful enough to share. So enjoy.
We decided to test whether the car can handle long ranges by going to Austria next week. It's a large country with numerous places, so I want to ask your help. Have you ever been to there?
EDIT: Thanks the suggestions for everyone, they were really useful!