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7 mo. ago

  • This is a huge one for me. For those who don't know, this brings up the rev-i-search utility which allows cycling from most recent to oldest commands executed. It also supports partial finds so if you did 'cd' it would cycle the most recent change directory commands.

    The forward search (in case you're somewhere in the history stack) is ctrl+s and operates the same except crawls the command history forwards.

    I use these constantly in my normal workflow and they save a ton of time.

  • I get what you are saying and this is definitely a factor but I think the bigger influencer was mobile adoption. As soon as smartphones took off it was inevitable that we would see a surge in cross platform frameworks/libraries.

    The fact we tackled this problem by shifting everything to web apps was also inevitable given the more simplistic deployment requirements and maintenance costs of a website vs native application.

    I feel like I am shouting to the void when I talk about performance of modern software being unbelievably bad.

  • Giving them your settings provides them (and anyone they sell it to) with more insight about you and how you use their software. This is valuable data and it kind of drives me crazy that articles refer to this as a free option. It isn't free. It's Microsoft pricing something low enough to get sales from middle of the road people, while being high enough that a lot of users opt into the backup option. It's a poorly veiled attempt to extract more of you for their training, their ad sales, or their targeted sales.

  • Specifically, Bazzite uses these and I have been really impressed since switching my daily driver from manjaro to bazzite.

    Bazzite also ships with a lot of gaming software and tweaks/fixes preconfigured which is nice if that is important to you.

  • Proton

    Jump
  • Honest answer? It makes it easy to release an application cross platform.

    Personal / hot-take answer? Because we are human and our drive for mediocrity is astounding...especially when it can save a few bucks. Why make something good when you can make something less good faster and cheaper? That should be Electron's slogan.

  • Not the OP but just wanted to say thanks for typing that out. I think it perfectly answers the question, gives several examples/explanations, and provides further research resources. It's always genuinely great to come across posts like this.

  • This person obviously has their own way of doing things that works for them and that's great. Some of his views are patently absurd though. This is mostly commenting on his reasons against using a forge and not a comment that he should do something differently.

    Trust

    100% fair and I think this is the main take-away from the blog post. If you don't trust something, don't use it. Full stop, the post could have ended there and been fine. But then it goes on to say:

    You get a workflow imposed on you

    You mean like forcing people to use email to submit pull requests to your self-hosted git repos? It doesn't matter what you are doing, if you are working on an open source project you are going to have workflow limitations. This is arguing a fallacy.

    In particular, your project automatically gets a bug tracker – and you don’t get a choice about what bug tracker to use, or what it looks like. If you use Gitlab, you’re using the Gitlab bug tracker. The same goes for the pull request / merge request system.

    Nothing is forcing you to use these features so just don't use them. Plenty of teams use 3rd party tools but host their code in a forge site. Having options available to you automatically is not the same thing as being forced to use them. If it was, JIRA wouldn't exist because everyone would use github/gitlab/whatever's built-in issue tracking and project management.

    The majority of the post comes across as someone who just doesn't like the forge sites and aside from the trust aspect, then spent a bunch of effort trying to create associations and limitations between things that don't exist.

    Trust is 100% the main reason not to use a forge site and all the other things cited are superfluous and/or very subjective.

  • Yeah we aren't anywhere close to the point of states breaking out of the union. Some people will call for it, maybe even a lot. But as soon as they realize what is required that shit will stop immediately. California would quite literally need to go to war with the union to gain that independence regardless of what they voted. So not only would they need to actually vote for it but then they'd have to be willing to go to war and kill and die for that separation and their independence.

    As strong as people feel, we aren't even close to that point. Not to mention it would fail; none of the states currently have any hope of competing against the US military machine. Give us a couple hundred more years to really really deteriorate and siphon all value from the people and land and we may be there.

  • It's hard to truly internalize this but no matter what you think about something and/or how wrong you think someone else is, we are walking through life with imperfect imaginings of what other people think and feel. Trying to make sense of people is even harder than making sense of a person. And we are quite literally incapable of truly knowing what goes on in someone else's head.

    Definitely ask these questions but don't drive yourself crazy if people don't make sense. The behaviors and actions we witness in others are only the emergent characteristics of a lot of brain activity that we aren't privy to.

  • Thank you, I appreciate this response to my comment. It's given me a wider perspective on the topic in general. It's almost like that arbitrary side is what keeps the wobble in humanity's path which forces us to continue advancing and understanding the world, never becoming complacent.

  • People in this thread are throwing around the term "smarter" a lot and I think we should avoid that. How quick you pick things up might be an indicator for being smart but it is only one aspect. The following are generalizations and there are always exceptions so keep that in mind.

    What you will find in life is a lot of the people like you describe have generally shallow knowledge of a subject but are capable of ramping up quickly and filling out that deeper knowledge as needed. Meanwhile, the folks who tend to take longer and study more retain more of the knowledge and are more capable at using it without supplemental data or analysis.

    It is the difference between knowing an answer and knowing enough to quickly find or intuit the answer.

  • Ask Lemmy @lemmy.world

    You must design an icon for a save function that can be easily understood by anyone in the future. What does that icon look like to you?