The advantage of being Ubuntu-based is faster updates.
The drawback is Snap, but it can be disabled.
Therefore, I think Pop and Mint should continue being so and doing that.
On a side note :
CalVer might be better for a more general audience
I disagree with this nevertheless, because when users learn what major/minor/patch mean, they can better understand how developers work and why should they upgrade.
Also, coincidentally but relevantly, CalVer is an homonym of the French calvaire which means misery.
J'ai également arrêté de suivre l'actu générale depuis environ 5 ans, ne suivant plus que la tech (ma passion) et certaines sciences qui m'intéressent, au final je m'en porte bien mieux.
un peu ironique de poster ça sur un agrégateur de liens
Concernant le Lemmy francophone en particulier, oui effectivement, car il existe encore trop peu de communautés thématiques, et les communautés généralistes sont effectivement inondées d'articles d'actualité.
Mais sur Reddit, avec un grand nombre de communautés thématiques, s'épargner les actualités est facile.
Fin 2020, j'ai acheté un ThinkPad X260 pour moins de 290€ (livraison comprise) sur eBay, qui fonctionne toujours très bien aujourd'hui (depuis lequel j'écris d'ailleurs ce commentaire).
S'agissant d'un 12.5 pouces, j'ai choisi d'installer Ubuntu Unity, s'agissant pour moi de l'environnement de bureau optimal pour petits écrans.
Voici des captures que j'avais postées sur Reddit il y a peu (j'y ai indiqué qu'il s'agit d'un 14 pouces par erreur).
Il me sert de PC d'appoint pendant mes déplacements (ou quand j'ai la flemme de quitter mon lit 😅), mon PC principal étant une tour avec trois écrans sur un bureau motorisé. 😎
You may have initially misunderstood my idea, but you did help.
And I implemented it in the meantime, as a library named hybrid-array (after your suggestion).
Not all transformative array methods have been checked yet, no unit testing nor comments have been written yet, no benchmarks have been performed yet, but these will happen.
It would be, except it doesn't allow any interaction between authors and readers, making federation almost pointless, it also lacks attachments hosting and other blog stuff.
There's also Plume, which has slightly more features, but still lacks a lot, isn't actively developed and is currently suffering from massive spam.
So, to conclude, there currently isn't any interesting federated blogging platform.
I used to enjoy the flexibility that JS provides. And IDEs do a pretty good job of filling the holes!
Exactly.
My last project, I went all in on typescript. And I have caught so many more errors before even compiling.
It’s like having tests. It gives a hell of a lot more confidence.
I can understand that too. Although, IDEs also catch a lot of type-related errors in vanilla JS.
The advantage of being Ubuntu-based is faster updates.
The drawback is Snap, but it can be disabled.
Therefore, I think Pop and Mint should continue being so and doing that.
On a side note :
I disagree with this nevertheless, because when users learn what major/minor/patch mean, they can better understand how developers work and why should they upgrade.
Also, coincidentally but relevantly, CalVer is an homonym of the French calvaire which means misery.