They would start to “seriously consider the possibility that perhaps something was not right”
They would start to “seriously consider the possibility that perhaps something was not right”
Spec says 4.
We’ve always been good at walking away, closing our ears, turning a blind eye…
No. We’re all waiting for this guy to activate it so we can get to work.
Even better, they took actual extensions and made them built-in and impossible to remove. The work was already done to keep a lightweight browser with extra features in option, and they reverted it.
It’s been going for years now. We just don’t want to move away because, frankly, there’s little viable alternatives.
systemd, as a service manager, is decent. Not necessarily a huge improvement for most use cases.
systemd, the feature creep that decides to pull every single possible use case into itself to manage everything in one place, with qwirks because making a “generic, do everything” piece of software is not a good idea, is not that great.
systemd, the group of tools that decided to manage everything by rewriting everything from scratch and suffering from the same issue that were fixed decades ago, just because “we can do better” while changing all well known interfaces and causing a schism with either double workload or dropping support for half the landscape from other software developer is really stupid.
If half the energy that got spent in the “systemd” ecosystem was spent in existing projects and solutions that already addressed these same issues, it’s likely we’d be in a far better place. Alas, it’s a new ecosystem, so we spend a lot of energy getting to the same point we were before. And it’s likely that when we get close to that, something new will show up and start the cycle again.
Native package manager > Native binaries > AppImage > Flatpak.
Yes, snap isn’t even on the scale.
They’re planning on making a version where everything is a snap. Performance and usability may come later, who knows.
If the alternative to “the nukes” is “gets steamrolled the old fashioned way” anyway, it’s not really an alternative.
I’m slightly worried about the really big guns russia supposedly have, but only slightly. At this point, it’s not like there’s a big red “launch” button on putin’s desk; it’d have to go through a few people that may have the actual big picture in their mind.
Now you have a visual interpretation of the concept of a plan.
So, saying people should “get used to cloud gaming and subscription only” in the future gets a free pass, even if the people that said it are the one trying to create cloud gaming and suscription only games?
No worries, at no point in recent years have I been feeling I “owned” a ubisoft game. Not even played them. I’m that committed to follow thge instructions of some dipshit.
Good news, they’re making eating in expensive too, so you can get the full experience!
They may get forbidden from operating in the US? Like, the same thing, in reverse?
The satellites trains do it already by themselves, it’s ok.
“Stalled I/O” has entered the process list :D
…you know people made fake pictures before image generation, right?