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2 yr. ago

  • System themes, probably most of them work. But most of them don't bother watching the user themes or icons folder.

    I don't think Flatseal is that useful for the majority of users, no. But it is a good tool to have in mind when the need arises.

  • It is mostly trial and error. I use it mostly to set envvars.

    As an example, I add the ~/.themes folder and the GTK_THEME to allow some apps to get the themes I downloaded.

  • About the image: The joke's on you, I install my flatpaks via the terminal.

    I've started using flatpaks more after starting using Bazzite and I liked them more than I expected. As a dev, I still need my work tools to be native, but most of my other needs are well covered by flatpaks.

    Tip: Flatseal is a great config manager for flatpaks' permissions.

  • I remember seeing somewhere that you can know the handedness of an elephant by looking at its tusks. The smaller tusk is the one that is used the most.

  • I used to 17 when I was in my hometown (tropical beach city).

    Now is mostly 1 and 2, with 20 occasionally

  • I love the fact that "Ninja Cat" was used as a mascot for Windows 10 Insiders back in the day. Makes the meme even better to me.

  • The same way they'll react if someone is right about the Earth being flat.

  • A few things I really liked about this episode:

    First, is good to see Lemmy being mentioned before Mastodon when the theme is Fediverse. Everybody here knows the "Fediverse is not only Mastodon", but it is very very good for it to be mentioned outside of our "bubble".

    Also, Jakob is the second LMG crew member I have confirmed to be in the Fediverse, Emily Young being the first one ( @emilyyoung@tech.lgbt go follow her). But Emily always was the "weird person that uses Linux" in the videos, so it was not a surprise for me she was using "alternative social media". Jakob was a surprise for me. Is he a weird and funny person? He is! But I didn't get the "Fediverse vibe" from him. Which is good. Very good.

    Again, is good to see the Fediverse start to show in (a little) more mainstream media. In such positive way.

    Jakob, I have a feeling you're reading this comments. I love your work, good to see you here. Hope you bring more people to the Fediverse. Keep being you.

  • I also started on a very small company. Worked there as Junior developer for about 3 years. I was on the same spot as you are right now. One day, I received a call from a friend who started working on a bigger company in a different state (I live in Brazil), saying they were hiring. I figured I could at least try their technical tests to see where should I improve.

    So I applied for the junior position. They thought my test solution was good, so I got to the interview phase. To my surprise, the interview was not for the junior position, but for the medior one (don't know the correct term, but higher than junior but lower than senior), and receive the job proposal on the next week.

    I agree with @MagicShel@programming.dev's comment: "you need exposure to other environments, other ideas, other technologies and frameworks in order to grow". And it goes both ways. Without testing yourself, you'll never know how much you did grow and where you are.

    So, my advice to you is: do not wait until you feel "ready" to do the move. It may "click" too late. If you want to move on, just do it. At least you will test yourself, and know how to correct your course, if you need to aim higher ou lower than originally intended.

  • I'm just waiting for the president of my country to start federating, then I can follow him from Mastodon and delete my Threads account.

    I see it as a positive thing

  • There's a problem with that on smaller instances.

    You can only see hashtags from people your instance already knows (someone follows them). On bigger, well-connected, instances this is not as problematic.

    But, no matter the size of the instance, it just shows how even the "hashtag experience" depends on the "following experience".

  • I believe it's how the data is structured.

    Lemmy is focused on themes and topics, with the "user" not being the focus (you can't even follow a user on Lemmy).

    That's reversed on Mastodon, with focus on the users you follow, and the topics (hashtags, groups, etc) being optional.

    For some people, Lemmy is better, for others, Mastodon or other microblog platform. The fact that both can exist in the same network is magical to me.

  • Star Wars Memes @lemmy.world

    Fear

  • I do see some cases where "experience using our product is a plus", but the way it was told you as a "negative feedback" I feel is wrong.

    They probably don't want to spend time training a new employee on their product, which to me is a huge red flag. You dodged a bullet there.

    My country (Brazil) doesn't have any regulations about it. Don't know about the EU.

  • You can post directly to a Lemmy community from Mastodon. But there's no way to do some kind of "cross-post" directly from a Mastodon post.