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442
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Their comment was about not having any hosted service though.

  • Gerrit is a hosted service, no?

  • Funny how this shows up as cross-posted to the same community when there's been a post about it two months ago.

    It shouldn't be labeled "cross-"post, but the linking to earlier discussion is certainly valuable and useful.

    I remembered this post.

  • Even just being able to view the source code without cloning is very valuable. A bare repo does not provide that.

  • Did you not do code reviews? It's the main thing I would miss. Being able to comment in-line, and manage iterations, is very valuable to me.

  • … or use them anyway because if they actually don't care for human rights, will they really care for licenses or licensing law in other countries?

    Even then I think establishing intent is worth something.

    And it may be different for some of the "lesser evil" modules of the license.

    they will do it anyway or just not use your library

    I think that's still worth something. Not being a part of it, even indirectly is worth something. Not enabling them.

  • It is not a generic term for source-available software, and never was.

    The problem with that reasoning is that precedence and origin do not necessarily define language use after it. Language evolves. Society and communities make up new or change definitions.

    Misuse of the term is evidence that it's not universally understood to be one way.

    I think it's mainly because "open source" can be understood as accessible, readable source. And many people seem to intuitively understand it as such. The "free" terminology on the other hand has a more ambiguous meaning between freedom and no cost. And early on, the "freeware" terminology was established as a differentiation to "free software". "Open source" does not have such an equivalent established differentiation (like "source-available", which seems to be just not as prevalent, maybe because there have been much fewer products with that alone).

    I understand the desire to correct, specifically with the established OSD. But I have to wonder if it will ever bear fruit, given these circumstances. And in consequence, whether it's even worth to point out.

  • I still hate the "vibe" terminology.

    What I would have liked it to mean: While coding, put on some music, and zone out to coding.

    What it means now: Prompt an AI to generate working code and solutions.

    I don't get where the "vibing" comes in. I guess you don't have to think about the technical details? And that's vibing? Maybe it's just unfamiliarity and lack of practice, but poking the AI via prompting and thinking about how you can influence it better doesn't feel like you could zone in to or "vibe".

    Maybe it's about letting go of reasoning and just going for it? Vibing in the sense of going with the flow?

    It's not the first terminology I find unfitting. I'm trying to accept that it is what it is, and that it just is what "we collectively" have decided to call it (or ran with).

  • really cool animations

    When will it launch?
    I'm not entirely sure yet. I'd love to get it out before the European summer this year.

    What if I want it right now?
    I'm going to do a pre-order, where you'll get access to the chapters that are already written. You'll get to see each chapter slowly take form as I push out new drafts.

  • I would hate to have header files with separate / duplicate declarations.

    If I want an interface I'll create an interface type.

  • Other languages have terminology like throw and break. We're not too far off.

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • How do you enjoy like Azure DevOps?

    I recently had the pleasure of working with it. Thank god I only set up CI for a different team and I'm not part of that project.

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Try out the fork furrier

  • You mean specifically net framework or net >= 6 as well?

  • Where can I find this language called violence?

  • I think the front and back end of PHP are pretty similar. They are both the same letter P after all.

  • You can see it in the post thumbnail

    /s