What a moron.
Bit-breaker working in cybersecurity/IT. Only languages I know are English and Programming ones.
Sometimes I write things about technology.
If I told you the SHA256 for this sentence starts with 'c, 5, four, a, and a', would you believe me?
What a moron.
Fedora because it’s stable and effective.
Yep. And you could even be ‘extra’ and do cool effects with compiz et all. Fancy got noticed by others.
Old school here, I use mutt. :P on android I use FairEmail and really like it.
Rightfully so.
The older, but not the oldest one… Gen-X.
More software and competitors are born from spite, versus anything else I’d bet.
it can’t really be that bad.
LoL; you say that… But
Lemmy isn’t much better in that regard.
Java and gradle build is way easier (IMO) than trying to wrangle the dep and build steps of everything react/node/rust based.
Usenet here. 4 paid indexers and the Usenet sub. Still cost less in a year than cable or streaming services cost in a month. Get everything I want and look for easily.
Amazing list, thanks for sharing.
Seconded. Weechat and Gomuks for matrix chat.
An OS can be restored. Backup your data, so /home
for sure and maybe any custom configs for /etc
, like your wireguard configs. So anything you specifically edited/added for /etc
directory.
Always has been…
Btop is pretty. Htop tells me what I want to know. I prefer htop and it’s my goto.
When we talk about Open Source, we’re not just talking about code. We’re talking about a way of approaching software, of designing it, developing it, distributing it, spreading it, making it something that benefits everyone. So being a developer in this context means thinking of software as a common good and then contributing means making it better and if by better we mean more useful, more accessible, more secure, more powerful, more stable and easier to use, then it’s clear that we are not just talking about writing code.
https://beehaw.org/comment/884681
It doesnt really matter what you want. The software is open source so anyone can use the software freely.
Respect is earned, not given.