• 7 Posts
  • 23 Comments
Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: August 3rd, 2020

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  • wiki_me@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlZLUDA's third life
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    1 month ago

    Legal then says later that the clause was not legally binding and can’t be enforced or such, making dev rollback to earlier Intel version

    Yeah it was said by email, i actually did some research and turned out it is indeed not legally binding, i think it is good to know.


  • good is the enemy of excellent. X11 works for most users (almost all the users?) well. You can see that with the adoptions of other standards like the C++ standards and IPV6 which can feel like forever.

    Another thing I think one of the X11 maintainers mentioned iirc is that they have been fairly gentle with deprecation. some commercial company could have deprecated X11 and left you with a wayland session that is inferior in some ways.


  • The score seems very similar to that of the US average life satisfaction score of 6.72. I assume the survey was done in the US.

    This seems like a classic case of Confounding . The happier scores seem to be from people that have more money (ios, macos ,pop os) , and people that have technical skills (slackware, gentoo , mobile linux) which are probably more educated and earn more money which iirc according to research correlates with being more happy. Arch users might have higher screen time which might cause lower levels of happiness. slackware might have older users which iirc according to research are happier.

    Of course this is not a scientific study , it hasn’t been peer reviewed and this could all be statistical noise.

    I think the best way to make linux users happier is have by default in the distro a course on being happier, i can’t find the link but iirc the course on coursera increased the score by 1 point (so probably somewhere around from 6.7/10 to 7.7/10), I spent a while learning about this stuff and experienced a similar jump (Although i don’t know if i will keep it if there will be some strong negative event).



  • it’s not that transparent , for example if i am considering funding signal , i can look at the 990 form , see the top salaries, the amount spent on salaries, the number of employees and calculate the average salary. I don’t mind it if the shareholders make a 10-20 percent return but i don’t want to to be a 90 percent return (which basically no public company has, from what i have seen in tech companies it is somewhere around 10-30 percent).








  • He is locked in California, a fairly progressive and leftist state i think , I am not entirely certain all that therapy is a good thing, i think i watched a documentary saying that psychopaths only learn from therapy how to be better manipulators and i feel like he sounds like psychopath even now.

    With that said if he gets out of prison i think he should be allowed to participate in FOSS (when someone reviews his contributions), i can’t help but wonder if his reportedly unhinged behavior on the kernel mailing list was handled better (e.g. mandating he will go to therapy) the murder would not have happened.



  • wiki_me@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlUbuntu Snap Hate
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    7 months ago

    paradoxically just because an organisation is a non profit does not mean it does not sell anything, it means that the people who “own” it are not doing it for a profit (e.g. voting members, board members , that is what is suppose to be legally guaranteed ), for example the wikimedia foundation (the creator of wikipedias ) sells access to data, MIT university for example is also a non profit.

    and i feel like the profit incentive might cause problems for the snap store, flathub warns when an app is closed source so it might be risky to use it, snap does not do that and maybe that is because that could hurt profits.


  • wiki_me@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlUbuntu Snap Hate
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    7 months ago

    Calling it hate is an exaggeration , people are entitled to their opinion and informing other people by criticizing snap.

    Another advantage not mentioned is that snap is a product of canonical (a for profit company talking about an IPO for years), flathub is managed by the gnome foundation (a US registered non profit, which should provide some legal protection).


  • My major problem has been the documentation of the project and how top contributors are unable to accept how bad it is. Discussions about improvements and attempts at improving it at regularly shut down or impeded. Coming back to the “harsh defense of perceived territory”, it distinctly feels like existing teams are supposed to be the only ones making changes to the things they own. Contributions from “outsiders” never exit nix review hell and are nitpicked to death.

    I made a one time contribution to the nix docs, I also got the impression that managing documentation could be better but it did got accepted after a few changes.

    With that said there are alternative projects that provide a form of documentation to nix.


  • verifying the submitter is a member of the project

    That’s a different requirement as far as i can tell (When you do that you get the “plus” sign next to the name on the store).

    the software name does not conflict with a well known name,…

    It should conflict, the point is that some random dude can create a package and people could use it.

    They can review and check that the URL in the manifest used to build or install the package is from upstream, but that can later be changed, it would be better to have some system where you need to whitelist URL’s i think.





  • wiki_me@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlCOSMIC Store Prototype
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    8 months ago

    Would be really useful to steal a few features from the steam store:

    • show ratings based on review in last X period of time (month/year etc)
    • show the highest upvoted reviews from that period (sort by usefulness)
    • filter by how many hours they used the software (opt in of course).



  • it’s basically the non profit software in the public interest that is governed by a board elected by open source contributors. From it’s website:

    Donations to SPI that are not marked for a particular project will be distributed to the projects that are currently affiliated with SPI as needed, and/or used for SPI’s own expenses.

    Maybe there is a place for non profit where donors elect a board of director that decides how to fund things, giving non programmers a way to influence the development of FOSS (and non programmers could have a lot to offer).

    There is also tidelift which does something similar.