https://dosowisko.net/
[ my public key: https://keybase.io/dos1; my proof: https://keybase.io/dos1/sigs/FMkys0vVncNF9H85wHvZfiUcJf8lrE0d9O7MqS7_E3o ]
-i output in C include file style.- > they now need to dig out knowledge on how to edit or undo existing commits
This knowledge is a crucial part of effective use of git every day, so if some junior dev has to learn it quick it's doing them a favor.
- Unlike some other common operations that can be easily cargo-culted, rebasing is somewhat hard to do correctly when you don't understand git, so people who don't understand git get antagonistic towards it.
- Well, sometimes you do if you made a mistake, but that's already handled by the reflog.
- Remember that such key will be copied into the repository on `git add` already and will stay there until garbage collected.
- Yes, we heard the CEO saying that Mozilla is not going to take the millions of dollars for doing so.
There are some things to be angry at Mozilla, but I'm not sure how you can read the exact opposite of what was being said in this particular case.
- I may try my hardest to be a great musician, but I'm not and surely won't be anytime soon. It's accepting your current shortcomings that may lead to improvement, not considering yourself good just because you try hard.
It's difficult and it's fine to struggle with it.
- I remember writing a Delphi application that spawned and used an agent, and even creating my own character when I was a teenager, so it surely wasn't that sparse.
Reimplementations exist too: https://mklab.eu.org/clippy/
- It's not a hard technical concept to grasp that placing a stick-it onto some thing doesn't make the thing behind it disappear.
- Both of these have worked fine for the last 15 years or so on all my laptops.
- I don't think my ability to sit with hunger without fainting or experiencing massive headaches is due to my willpower. Fortunately, at least I'm not ignorant about it and don't write comments like yours.
- The fee should be tiny at first and rise exponentially over time.
- > hasn't been an explicit goal for the Linux desktop (pushed esp by the Gnome/Fedora folks) to have applications run in a sandbox?
Yes, and the article's author forgot to tell you that their rant doesn't apply to applications running in a sandbox, as their D-Bus access is filtered.
- D-Bus has no concept of generic services. People are using D-Bus to get automatic startup of generic services even though it's not fit for this purpose. It's quite a different thing.
You could build a viable solution on top of D-Bus though, it's just that apparently nobody bothered so far.
- Works just fine on Wayland as well. It's simply a Unix socket that you can set permissions for, it's even easier than X11 with its magic cookies.
- Just from the top of my head that I've noticed as a user: several apps, such as Dolphin or Yakuake, use konsolepart; KWrite uses katepart, and Ark uses various parts in its file preview.
$ ls -1 /usr/lib/qt6/plugins/kf6/parts | wc -l 20 - While there is some valid criticism to be held against D-Bus and its implementations (there's more than one in common use), this article never goes there. It appears to be just an incoherent rambling of someone with poor understanding of how systems work together.
...and people would be using hardware spanning several generations that actually considerably differed in performance, as nobody but the nerds was buying a new PC every year.