Skip Navigation

Posts
81
Comments
503
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • Yeah I have actual notes and processes in my personal wiki too. I don't like having to look up that one command that I only ever rarely use, like the I need to know if this webpage is serving a 200 or not... what did I do last time??

  • Stressful but that's normal? Less stressful than some other years. Family likes their gifts so much they're arguing about them. No work today though so win there. I need a break from the break...

  • The problem when you own a space that if you let certain groups of people in, such as, in this example, Nazis, you'll literally drive everyone else away from your space, so that what started off as a normal, ordinary space will become, essentially, a Nazi bar.

    It's not only Nazis — it can be fascists, white supremacists, meth-heads, PUAs, cryptocurrency fanboys — some groups will be so odious to others that they will drive everyone else from your space, so the only solution that you can enact is to ensure that they don't come to your place, even if they're nice and polite and "follow your rules", because while they might, their friends won't, those friends have a history of driving away other people from other spaces.

    "you have to nip it in the bud immediately. These guys come in and it's always a nice, polite one. And you serve them because you don't want to cause a scene. And then they become a regular and after awhile they bring a friend. And that dude is cool too.

    And then THEY bring friends and the friends bring friends and they stop being cool and then you realize, oh shit, this is a Nazi bar now. And it's too late because they're entrenched and if you try to kick them out, they cause a PROBLEM. So you have to shut them down.

  • I have a Kobo Clara HD, also moved quite a few years ago from a Kindle to this. I really love the accessibility of the Kobo ecosystem. The store, while not as vast as Amazon, has good books to choose from. You can also load your own items onto it. Calibre has good support. All in all, I am happier with it than the Kindle; not worried about a book disappearing on me.

  • That's AJAX

    Yes, and that's what is shown in this article.

    ... return HTML content and use the htmx library to handle the AJAX requests

    htmx is not meant to do anything fancy that you can’t do with Ember/Angular/React/Vue/etc.

    htmx is simpler though and has a few benefits as I see it, compared to those frameworks:

    • No duplication of data models and routing, and all business logic stays on the server-side where it belongs.
    • No build step, no dependency hell, and no outrageous churn; just include one JS file that browsers should be able to run indefinitely.
  • This may be relevant to your situation.

  • There is a big difference between a lot of content and quality content. I appreciate Beehaw for our quality, not the quantity. There are certainly some great content on other instances, but sorting through the crap noise to find the good, just isn't worth my effort.

  • Don't starve together is more fun to play with others. But yeah the base Don't starve gets tedious and annoying, quickly.

  • Etar is my go to calendar app as well, pair with the ICSx5 and I just works.

  • There is an identity protocol for achieving that, called zot. However it requires the forums/sites you're visiting to have Zot implemented. That is likely not the case, as Zot is way less prevalent than even ActivityPub.

  • I use Time Recording on mobile for this. It's not FOSS but it does everything you want, exception being not on the PC.

  • Hi, It's still a conversation and as far as I know, planned. We don't take that measure lightly though and definitely don't want to cause users frustration by doing so. There are still some major sticking points we have such as what would fit our purpose best, user friction and security, etc. Don't want to move to something else and it be worse long term.

  • In that order.

  • I was expecting this to be a randomized selector. Just roll the dice!

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Objection noted; but this is not the forum to publicly air your disagreement.

    Also, to wit there is a difference between beehaw admins and beehaw moderators. You are speaking about actions taken by beehaw moderators, of the community you posted the original post at.

  • There really is no reason to use CalyxOS vs Graphene these days. GrapheneOS offers sandboxed play services with the standard SELinux policies for unprivileged Android software.

    GrapheneOS also has hardened_malloc, which seems to have the best design for malloc hardening out of any alternatives I'm aware of.

    MicroG requires very strong privileges and weakens the comprehensive privsep you'd otherwise have. Calyx shouldn't be considered much more secure than Android Open Source Project (AOSP).

  • The company goes against the Linux philosophy in everything it does. Ubuntu as an OS is more like Microsoft than Linux, in spirit; we're going to tell you how the system operates and you'll deal with it. Litany of privacy issues by default. And like the Admiral says below, the insanity of snap bullshit. Oh, and then there's this crap.