Google -> SquareSpace?
Lung @ lung @lemmy.world Posts 1Comments 251Joined 2 yr. ago

Yeah it's been obvious and foreseeable that normal admins won't have the bandwidth to handle takedown requests and cp spam attacks. Sadly the only stable state I see for the fediverse is relying on centralized content hosts that can handle those problems. Well, maybe until AI can do it
Fkin adorable!
I manage like 200 servers in Google cloud k8s but I don't think I'd do that for home use. The core purpose is to manage multiple servers and assign processes between them, auto scaling, cluster internal network - running docker containers for single instance apps for personal use doesn't require this kind of complexity
My NAS software has a docker thing just built into it. I can upload or specify a package and it just runs it on the local hardware. If you have a Linux shell, I guess all you really have to do is run dockerd
to start the daemon, make sure your network config allows connections, and upload your docker containers to it for running
Cute that they are still doing it. I used Enlightenment for a while in college.
Honestly, it's not particularly good, and you still have to run the GTK or KDE stacks to get decent software, but hell, it's ground-up different, and very stable. Shocking that Samsung paid for it to be developed; not sure what dope they were smoking, but cool
Probably still makes more sense to pick XFCE, which has most of the same UX, but is GTK. Not that any of it matters anymore because I live my entire computer life either in a terminal or web browser
I'm a Joplin contributor and if you think the android app is halfway decent, that's a win ahahaha. The desktop apps are what makes it a superstar though, with all the plugins and community. The mobile apps have been slowly modernizing but it's real basic
It's just like 4x longer for no real reason. The language just isn't that hard, and I feel like they were cashing in on publishing a million new editions. C hasn't changed much
Also, random plug for Go, which feels about as simple as C but tackles modern problems better (concurrency, amazing garbage collection, servers, world class tooling). Any C developer will feel comfortable with Go super quickly
There's no version of smoking that's totally healthy. Even just inhaling fumes from a fireplace isn't great. I imagine a lot of em will smoke for real, or use a filler like sage or hemp
I guess you could imagine stuffing a vape into a prop cig, but that sounds high effort
Really boring article. It takes like 5 pages to get to what it's tryna say: use CRDT, which is a real time collaborative editing algo, and CRDT is awesome. Problem is internet topologies and all the weird stuff that goes on
Take webrtc, which is exactly meant for p2p data streaming between arbitrary peers. Well, the dirty secret is that for it to work well, you usually need a TURN server, which is a centralized data relay. Unless you're connecting over local network, the turn server serves to literally send all the webrtc data to the peers
When you think about this some more, many many apps would be worse p2p. Think about anything with a CDN delivering video or files. Obviously you want those videos pre-replicated worldwide so that they can be served asap. Ok so p2p is only for collaboration, fine
Next problem, there's a good reason we all chose cloud. Even huge corps realized it would save them a ton of money to switch from their expensive private datacenters and staff. They were already paying money to some bomb shelter style server host, now they are just doing it virtually. And your engineers no longer have to drive out to wipe drives or replug wires, it's all perfectly managed
Imo the most legit thing to do is to read an old copy of "the c programming language" which is a guide written by the authors of C. The early editions were under 100 pages, super clear to understand, and you'll feel connected with the mentality of the creators. C is a simple and elegant language, much less complex than most modern ones
Well, I'm pretty pissed, and it feels like Google, probably the biggest Internet company, has really gone insane. I mean, a web company stops selling domains? Why? It makes total sense with their Cloud offerings and other stuff like managed Gmail/apps
Anyway I have like a dozen domains there so I'm just going to hang in for the rollover and hopefully I don't need to do anything. Ultimately, I use this stuff like 2ce a year so it doesn't really matter who holds the domains for me