I understand what you're saying. What would make GrayJay open source? Allowing for community contribution?
Edit: I looked it up thanks to your unhelpfullness, and open source seems to mean making the code available for the community to use, modify, and share, which Grayjay seems to do. I'm pretty sure I'm right here, but I do want to hear your definition and argument. Is your issue that the license doesn't allow others to make money using the source code?
By the acronym, opening up the source code to the public would make it open source. What is Grayjay missing to be open source then? Accepting contributions?
I don't even know what the rates on my cards are. I just pay them off. I also don't bother with cards with monthly fees, unless the Costco card counts.
The whole system is stupid though, a tax on the financially illiterate and poor. I wish I could just use debit and cash, but that's just throwing away free money from cash back on credit cards.
Have you worked somewhere before? Yeah, they should, but they won't. It's easier and cheaper to say no to everything unless there's a serious tangible business reason that you need to use it, at which point they'll look into it.
My company has rejected a bunch of stuff with the only reason being "Security Risk" with no further reasoning provided when asked. It's super aggravating.
Yeah I thought it was weird that it couldn't do this in windows in the first place when you had to click a button to allow the AI to change your computer from light to dark mode or something. It was right 99% of the time in my brief testing, and just include an undo button in case it isn't.
All of that said, I'm glad to be on Linux where there isn't any AI built into my OS, but I'm also not the target audience for needing an AI to change my settings for me.
I'm new to docker and all of my shit stopped working recently. Just wouldn't load. Took about a half hour to find out that old images were taking up about 63GB on my 100GB boot partition, resulting in it being completely full.
I added the command to prune 3 month old images to my update scripts.
I understand what you're saying. What would make GrayJay open source? Allowing for community contribution?
Edit: I looked it up thanks to your unhelpfullness, and open source seems to mean making the code available for the community to use, modify, and share, which Grayjay seems to do. I'm pretty sure I'm right here, but I do want to hear your definition and argument. Is your issue that the license doesn't allow others to make money using the source code?