We’ve always been good at walking away, closing our ears, turning a blind eye…
We’ve always been good at walking away, closing our ears, turning a blind eye…
No. We’re all waiting for this guy to activate it so we can get to work.
systemd, as a service manager, is decent. Not necessarily a huge improvement for most use cases.
systemd, the feature creep that decides to pull every single possible use case into itself to manage everything in one place, with qwirks because making a “generic, do everything” piece of software is not a good idea, is not that great.
systemd, the group of tools that decided to manage everything by rewriting everything from scratch and suffering from the same issue that were fixed decades ago, just because “we can do better” while changing all well known interfaces and causing a schism with either double workload or dropping support for half the landscape from other software developer is really stupid.
If half the energy that got spent in the “systemd” ecosystem was spent in existing projects and solutions that already addressed these same issues, it’s likely we’d be in a far better place. Alas, it’s a new ecosystem, so we spend a lot of energy getting to the same point we were before. And it’s likely that when we get close to that, something new will show up and start the cycle again.
Native package manager > Native binaries > AppImage > Flatpak.
Yes, snap isn’t even on the scale.
They’re planning on making a version where everything is a snap. Performance and usability may come later, who knows.
If the alternative to “the nukes” is “gets steamrolled the old fashioned way” anyway, it’s not really an alternative.
I’m slightly worried about the really big guns russia supposedly have, but only slightly. At this point, it’s not like there’s a big red “launch” button on putin’s desk; it’d have to go through a few people that may have the actual big picture in their mind.
They may get forbidden from operating in the US? Like, the same thing, in reverse?
The satellites trains do it already by themselves, it’s ok.
“Stalled I/O” has entered the process list :D
Someone made that, sort of. Unfortunately, the privacy nightmare is slightly reduced compared to the original one.
the parties, exhausted by campaigning, will learn to compromise and make a coalition
Good luck with that.
Because saying things, even if they are known, is a thing humans do for various reasons. It seems that sometimes they need to be reminded simple truth.
It’s true though. Saying this is not necessarily meant to be the end of a discussion.
They want to sell thinner phones, but the optics needs some room to be useful, so it shows. The little range they can get with keeping that much width do a lot for image quality.
We had IoT, Web3, and now AI. Part of it seems linked to very good salespeople pushing it onto other salespeople.
For the first two, we’ve seen business spinup quickly and have very aggressive arguments, backed by cash, pushed onto existing business as “the solution to everything”. Only to burn down later as a gimmick nobody really cares beyond a handful of niche applications.
So far with AI there’s a handful of “big name” business that pushes it as the ultimate solution for everything and are injecting ton of cash in that discourse. We just have to wait a bit if the last part of that happens. After that we’ll go back to normal until the next “big thing” gets propped up.
Not putting him on a pedestal as a representative of your country would be a good start.
I don’t see him running a lot already.
The good old lying approach, I see.
They would start to “seriously consider the possibility that perhaps something was not right”