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DigitalDilemma @ digdilem @lemmy.ml
Posts
2
Comments
549
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Over the past year Musk has removed all masks and clearly believes he can operate beyond the law. His motives are clearly to watch the world burn. He is an extremely dangerous, unpredictable and powerful man, threatening democracy across the globe.

    Our governments need to protect us from him. Brazil's being brave here, I hope they're just the first.

  • I'm inclined to give Linux more benefit of the doubt than, say, Windows. That's because of the motives behind it.

    Microsoft have a very long history of making design choices in their software that users don't like, and quite often that's because it suits their interests more than their customers. They are a commercial business that exists to benefit itself, after all. Same with Apple. Money spoils everything pure, after all. You mention privacy, but that's just one more example of someone wanting to benefit financially from you - it's just in a less transparent and more open-ended way than paying them some cash.

    Linux, because that monetary incentive is far less, is usually designed simply "to be better". The developers are often primary users of the software. Sure - sometimes developers make choices that confuses users, but that over-arching driving business interest just isn't there.

  • The point people are making is that communication and discipline, both things that require time and skill, would be a better, less invasive approach.

    Perhaps that's being done as well?

    But even if it is, that approach doesn't work with all people, no matter how skillful or how much time is put into it.

  • Agree - after they started bundling adware in downloads (2013ish?), all the decent projects seemed to move to github en masse.

    Those projects that stayed were mostly already stagnant, or the maintainers didn't use git and didn't want to learn, or had some other reason that allowed them to accept advertising on their work.

  • (Ignoring the ageist and sexist "old men" statements in this thread because it's irrelevant)

    They will die out,

    ... and be replaced with other technically invested people who are resistant to change. Such as with every massive project ever - at least until you get a tyrant who ignores the feelings and work of of others and is in a position to push through their own vision.

  • OP is on OpenWRT

    Fair point - I missed that, buried in the comments as it was.

    In that scenario, you use what's available, I guess.

    OP said they just want to copy a binary around. Can you do that with perl?

    This is linux. Someone will have done it.

  • I work at scale - deploying scripts to hundreds of linux machines and any package you install will be multiplied that many times on the backend storage. You don't get the luxury of installing anything that isn't essential.