- hello_computerI like it. Hope it gets some traction.
- There are so many neo-shells that go crazy with colors, autocompletions, & SQL-like features while the most basic problems (like handling of newlines/spaces/international chars) are mostly swept under the rug with -null/-print0, which is more hack than solution. I think Tom Duff's rc shell was an excellent start in that direction, which sadly went nowhere.
- > article full of nonsense
Pls elaborate. Seems like a decent list of shell gotchas to me.
- This is true. I've had so many problems where the pills and creams were time and money down the drain, and the solution was to cut something out of my diet or lifestyle. Less is more.
- [flagged]
- are there any good open-source porn-detector models out there? if i ran an image board in 2025, that would be job #1, since it’s really just a weapon, and we don’t speak or print with our genitals—well, most of us anyway…
- Have to wonder about the sincerity of this after Yasha Levine illustrated the ties between big tech and the EFF, when big tech’s present theory of copyright is:
> Our Copyright: based and red-pilled
> Your Copyright: fake and gay
- Obviously, but that's not what I'm getting at. Due to present technical limitations, "influencers" have to sharecrop for Google/Facebook/Twitter/etc. Bandwidth/storage/software improvements will allow successful "influencers" to flee the plantation.
- > Suppose, hypothetically, you invented an actually effective weight loss drug—one that leads to permanent and healthy change.
> Let’s say it’s a drug that both decreases leptin resistance and prevents simple carbs from triggering the brain’s reward centers. And suppose it doesn’t require someone to keep taking it for the rest of their life, as long as they don’t fall back into obesity.
> Now, imagine you’re not interested in getting rich—you legitimately want to solve the obesity epidemic.
> But then you realize the weight loss industry is a multi-billion-dollar machine, not to mention the pharmaceutical companies profiting off obesity-related health issues. They’re not just going to let this drug come out without a fight.
> Suppose you don’t even care that you're likely to end up falsely accused of rape by women you've never met, and probably dead soon after, with a “suicide note” conveniently found next to your body. You just want to find the best way to get this drug out there and available to the public.
> Assume, for the moment, that no one but you and a small group of trusted researchers know about this discovery—and you stumbled across it accidentally while researching something else.
> What would be the best approach to make this drug available to the public, knowing that powerful, interested parties would do everything in their power to suppress it?
- obs, jitsi, & raspbian are not “hobby projects”. do you work for redhat?
- > More than 2/3rds of your examples are from over 5 years ago
Exactly! If you scroll to the bottom of each one, you will see that most are either a) still open, or b) abandoned (too hard or impossible), then closed as stale.
> image of a testicle when hotlinked from HN
Rightly so.
- 2016-01-23 https://github.com/MaartenBaert/ssr/issues/431
2019-01-04 (only took 3 1/2 years to resolve!) https://github.com/flathub/us.zoom.Zoom/issues/22
2020-03-07 https://github.com/vkohaupt/vokoscreenNG/issues/51
2020-03-07 https://github.com/obsproject/obs-studio/issues/2471
2020-03-24 https://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-meet/issues/6389
2023-09 https://www.jwz.org/blog/2023/09/wayland-and-screen-savers/
2023-11-17 https://github.com/raspberrypi/bookworm-feedback/issues/149
- > moles from certian big corp are boycotting any substantial work on Xorg, in order to destroy the project
That's what I've always thought. The "X11 developers" pushing for Wayland weren't original developers so much as RedHat "maintainers," who (understandably) wanted a frontier to explore rather than janitorial work. All I know for certain is that X11 (even as of 15 years ago) mostly worked, while Wayland of 2025 is still full of headaches & breakages.
- The good news is that LLMs + growth in storage & bandwidth will eventually put Google in its place. The full texts of stack exchange and wikipedia (kiwix) are only a few gigs. Same for offline models like llama/gemma/qwen. As the wizards keep finding new ways to pack more bits on metal plates, we will be able to store more video than we will ever watch, just as we now store more text than we will ever read.