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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)P
Posts
3
Comments
199
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • The amount of people that are in knots trying to defend a barbaric practice is quite telling.

  • I donn't believe this is true. Microsoft is known for trotting out garbage that nobody wants. Sometimes they back off. Sometimes they beat us down until we fall in line.

    I suspect an assortment of realities that include individual partnerships on the boards, bribes, kickbacks, and more blitz style manipulation to "ensure" LG that people want this, and of course there is also the realization that they will make bank before people realize they're getting bamboozled.

  • Apparently performs as router and firewall distro. I have no idea what possessed me to install that at the time over 10 years ago. But in any case, bad on me for blindly trusting an unknown source and bad on them for a dick shit design.

    But I know one thing is for sure, that name is pretty accurate. A lot of my own "IP" was torched.

  • During my distro hopping phase of 2011, I tried out a distro called IP Fire. It wiped out my whole drive on boot.

    I still have that laptop, hoping one day I'll retrieve that data.

    That is a shitty design and for an outfit a big as Microsoft, I feel that it is intentional

  • Maybe you're right. But arch is stable.

  • I've always despised their naming schemes. I always thought I'd they ever started a car company they'd name their vehicle make as "car".

    At least Xbox is original but now I'm sitting here wondering if they bought it off a small outfit

  • Good explanation. I'd say that's still a lot of processing for our noggins to quickly adapt to a framework of mind to comprehend all that to make sense of it.

    I still like the name and it does make since after it's all spelled out.

  • For clean separation and keyboard use.

    I don't know if i3 is the best tiling manager but it's the one I use and I like it. The reason I like using the tiling manager with tmux is that I never have to use the mouse. I have a different environment in different each window.

    super+1 is main tmux development area.

    super+2 might be remote server tmux area.

    super+3 might be development browser views

    super+4 might be my Qutebrowser with documentation texts.

    super+5 is note taking apps.

    super+6 libreWolf for regular browsing, etc.

    And I can have multiple things going on in each window but all I have to do is press super+f to make a tmux session (or whatever app) full screen. For instance in super+1, I might have one tmux, session for local development and one for the incus server I'll working in.

    In tmux I have over 10 different sessions going on. So I can quickly go to any number of apps I'm working on or to my utils session where I do most of my cpu checks. One session is just for browsers I keep open so I can keep track of them easily and/or kill them quickly with Ctrl+c. This has the added benefit of always keeping my tabs saved when I open them back up.

    In my tmux app sessions lies nvim which is a great ide. I keep one tab window open for git doings. One for backend nvin instance. And one for frontend nvim instance. Then one open for the server and other terminal related stuff. Another for database.

    Just makes organization easier.

  • Arch -> i3 -> terminator -> tmux -> nvim.

    Nvim is IDE and vim for quick edits.

    LXC/incus and podman containers

    Usually use Debian for server administration but have recently been using fedora and rocky Linux and other rpm based distros for their easier use of podman configurations (quadlets). I don't really recommend using fedora as a server (unless it's in an incus container) but I got into it as CentOS was deprecating and the podman systemd setup was catching on at the time and fedora was handling it the best at the time.

    Dropped out of GitHub for the most part and getting acclimated with codeberg and forgejo.

    Use librewolf for browsing and firefox-developer-edition with many profiles for testing and development. Qutebrowser for reading documentation.

  • Guess I came off a bit strong. Although when I think about 2016, my blood boils. And then they did it again in 2024.

    And the funny thing is, I relish the moment we get a woman president. Then these 2 corporate hacks phonied their way to the front of the line and set women back at least 2 decades.

    UPDATE:

    This really had me thinking and I see that kind of attitude of sticking your head in the sand is just going to give us Trump part 3.

    This person won't read this but anyone else reading this need to understand that if you run fascist light, then you will get the fascist and your candidate will go home crying again.

    You want people to vote, then give them what they fucking want.

  • Put another Clinton up there and see what happens.

    Y'all thought you knew what you was doing when you sniped Bernie.

    We built you a revolution and you burnt it down.

    Clinton Democrats are the real bootlickers. Who wants to be a part of that?

  • We can either burn showly. Or burn quick and get the fire over with.

  • Deleted

    Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Is your code open source and if not, are you just handing your code over to an AI for scraping?

  • Yeah, I remember. She's good with her hands.

    UPDATE:

    It was definitely a gamble to assume that you guys would read my username.

  • 15 years ago it was much cheaper than a hotel. Depending on the type of reservation, you may also get a kitchen and basically a house.

    But things have changed and now they're not the cheapest route anymore. Some people get horror stories as you can imagine because... People do shitty things sometimes as is human law of statistics.

  • I do agree with you.. for now. But this is just the beginning.

    And to be fair, I do believe something has to change. However, we'll find out in 10 years if this is the can of worms we really wanted to open.

    Hopefully, the open source community and the "competitive commons" will make strides faster than the oligarchs can suffocate it.

  • And just like that.. the sunk has shipped

  • This adds an extra layer of entry into the competition and ensures the big boys stay on top.

  • LibreWolf browser