It’s really fun but still kinda rough around the edges. I wish there other games like this that are fully fleshed out and complete.
It’s really fun but still kinda rough around the edges. I wish there other games like this that are fully fleshed out and complete.
On Android it’s the only one I’ve found that plays OPUS and organizes by album artist rather than song artist.
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actually funny how intrusive it is
Email with PGP is very far from secure. No forward secrecy (one mistake and the entire thread history is revealed) and metadata is unencrypted.
The declarative abstraction of just setting values of options is very nice but I quickly ran into many edge cases where it leaked, which have been fixed years later. Obviously I don’t want to wait years but I couldn’t figure out how to fix it myself. I was able to overcome the learning curve of all the various hyphenated CLI programs (seriously what’s up with that), how home-manager fits in, basics of the nix language, etc., but got stuck at trying to learn nix well enough to actually contribute.
There’s a huge barrier in straying from the well-trodden path, and I think that path will always be behind the cutting-edge. In traditional distros I just have to install something or edit a text file somewhere. Prime example right now is pytorch with rocm support. In Arch Linux it’s pacman -S python-pytorch-rocm
. In NixOS I barely remember and I don’t think it even worked for me but I think it was this: https://github.com/nixos-rocm/nixos-rocm#installation
I started using dotdrop to track and manage my user and system configurations and wrote a basic ansible playbook for my desktop install setup which has achieved 90% of what I was looking for in NixOS. These days what intrigues me about NixOS is that it might be a great alternative in the server space as a competitor to using docker or wasm.
Here’s a post discussing that: https://feddit.de/post/781919
lemmites like how the users of luddy were called luddites
I’m sure it’s fine code, I just can’t imagine it’ll ever be as efficient as Rust.
They do get updated but very conservatively. They prioritize stability so their older kernel and system/library packages means all of their packages in general are also kept behind. Debian 11 for example is still on Python 3.9.2 whereas in Arch it’s at 3.11.3 (and it’s called python not python3).
Why not both? I think they see this as an opportunity to kill two birds with one stone.
Really hard to trust Meta. They could help advance ActivityPub. Or maybe they go full Microsoft Embrace Extend Extinguish and damage the Fediverse. Or it could be benign. Look at XMPP where it was adopted by big companies but they eventually stopped federating and down the line replaced it with their own proprietary protocols.
I envy Gentoo for having x86-64-v3
I’ve had similar musings as yours I think. I think the way to make a decentralized community as user friendly as a centralized one would be making the decentralization transparent somehow. One way would require a way for hosters to volunteer computing resources in a way that’s more like adding cattle to a herd rather than pets to a family like in fediverse/matrix/email. More ephemeral and happening in the background. I think the downside is that this is getting closer to peer-to-peer which has a lot of overhead and scaling issues (factorial growth). Federation lies between p2p and client-server but maybe there is room to push it closer to p2p to unlock transparent distribution of resources.
Arch Linux. Always very up-to-date and the AUR is huge. No dealing with PPAs or snaps or flatpaks or appimages. Just paru -S any-software-ever-made
. Also very streamlined (systemd for everything lol) and well documented. I tried NixOS for a bit but it was very inconvenient in comparison and I felt like it was impossible to tinker with or understand if you weren’t good at Haskell. Terrible documentation.
For servers it’s definitely Debian + docker.
kbin looks good but I can’t get over the fact that its backend is written in PHP. In the long run, lemmy’s Rust backend will probably be way more resource efficient and thus better for hosters. We’ll have to see though, since tech stacks aren’t the most important thing. But for me a Rust backend is a huge plus.
I don’t know if ActivityPub has anything to further distribute beyond instances but what you’re talking about reminds me of IPFS and some crypto backed stuff like Filecoin.
caddy for not having to think about TLS
it’s not that they’re hardcore marxists but that they are tankies, you can find a lot of discussions about this out there