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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/)HE
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5 mo. ago

  • That doesn't mean anything to normal people.

    I tried explaining it to my parents and they didn't understand why that would be a good thing:

    "Doesn't a professional company know better how to run this?

    Doesn't a company have more guarantee to be lawful, because they will be under the magnifier glass compared to a bunch of anonymous individuals?

    Why should I trust a bunch of randos with it? Why should I give them my password? [...]"

  • And yet, only €376.3/month on patreon.


    Also, I keep wondering why Anubis got so popular while other proof of work captchas have been around for much longer. Is there any fundamental difference to mCaptcha or altcha?

    (except for maybe that altcha is trying to make a business by serving customers that don't want to selfhost it).

    Any technical reason for prefering anubis?

  • What's always missing is nomacs - the best image viewing and light editing toolkit app on linux.

    Nobody ever mentions it. Why is that? Why? It supports all the formats. It has the best slideshow options. The UI is as minimal or as informative as you set it to be. WHYYYYYY DOES NOBODY TALK ABOUT IT??? Who paid you to be silenced?

    (and yes, it can convert the formats)


    https://nomacs.org/

    https://github.com/nomacs/nomacs

    1. Software Architects Handbook - Joseph Ingeno
    2. Game Programming Patterns - Robert Nystrom
    3. Tidy First - Kent Beck

    First one I found the most useful.

    Second one gave me a new perspective, even though I am not programming games, I could apply this new perspective to my regular code.

    Third one is the nicest book on that topic. I hated "the classics" but I enjoyed this one a lot.


    Bonus round:

    1. Etudes for Programmers - Charles Wetherell

    It's how I learned to code.