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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)GK
Posts
4
Comments
45
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • +1 for RSS but it doesn't really replace the comments. granted on reddit the quality of discussion has for sure declined and lemmy is still a little dead sometimes. but it still provides value (to me)

    someone should build a distributed comment system that works with plain old RSS feeds

  • i have a gentoo system with a custom s6-rc service tree that fully replaces openrc and boots via s6-linux-init.

    instead of a display manager i have tinydm (from postmarketos) and autologin setup. since i use full-disk encryption and suspend-to-disk i find that i don't need the extra login step into my user session.

    i have a bunch of bemenu-based helpers for wifi, bluetooth, vpn, audio, passwords, mounting drives, etc.

    i don't have polkit or sudo installed. i use doas.

  • i joined mastodon in 2017. at the time i was also cutting off whatsapp and facebook and was just generally getting deeper into foss and fedi.

    at the same time i was a heavy reddit user and was looking for fedi-based alternatives. i was following prismo development for a while, but that never took off.

    i eventually joined lemmy in 2020 but never really found the community, that reddit had (and tbf still has for most topics).

    last year during the API fiasco i finally made this account and have been pretty happily reading (and sometimes posting) here.

  • i have been running qmk keyboards with capslock bound to esc on tap, alt when pressed as well + evdoublebind to achieve the same for the laptop's builtin keyboard

    i do like the idea of not having to come off the home row for ctrl-* mappings in vim

  • Programming @programming.dev

    Has anyone used a programmable keyboard with "home row mods" like this?

  • maybe my comment about gitlab didn't come across right. i do find oxide's model to be better and agree with their criticism of gitlab's.

    and as much as you are absolutely right about labour being treated much like any other commodity required for a company to extract value, that is precisely the issue being pointed at here, isn't it?

    we should differentiate and acknowledge that people are more complex than that. their experiment seems to create an atmosphere where work is being done despite compensation not being used as an incentive and instead to enable the worker to do the work.

    i personally don't think this should be a responsibility of a company at all, but rather society (or the state) should assure these conditions... but we are stuck with capitalism and this is a step towards something better :)

  • Technology @beehaw.org

    Paying everyone the same salary, no matter where they work from

  • so I wonder what the benefit is keeping it in the proprietary format at all

    yeah my guess was easier editing and ux when collaborating via github, diffs on json don't look great

    but yaml (for all it's faults) would still be better haha or now that i think about it:

    both look similar to bru, would share the advantages over json and seem better spec'd/supported

  • Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ @lemmy.dbzer0.com

    One way to make piracy obsolete

    Linux @lemmy.ml

    Anybody have a solution for dotfiles outside /home