Same I pivoted to PocketCasts
I really don’t find that to be true. I see lots of toy implementations, general philosophical discussions, hell even just man pages.
HackerNews(ycomb) is a veritable gold mine but I find the community to be a bit caustic at times.
There is a HackerNews mirror on Lemmy here that I like but not too many people comment. If I saw more activity I’d probably comment more.
What are you talking about?
This is wickedly cool and I was wanting something like this last night. Crazy that I stumble on it the morning after.
Half Life Alyx was sick and demonstrated everything VR could be. I will standby that statement and tolerate the flamers.
That’s fair but I think one of the most critical features of Calibre for me is interfacing with my e-reader over USB to download/upload my epubs. I don’t know how that would work from a Browser app.
Can you give a specific reason?
I feel that I’m usually more upset that apps choose electron and I have performance issue because they didn’t spend time writing a proper lightweight desktop application. I feel like Calibre is actually one of those apps.
I could see portability across devices being useful but is the Calibre interface really going to be conducive for that?
Not even in this slightest is that sad. The economy correcting for the wrong person having massive wealth.
Is this just part of the playbook for him to not have to pay taxes by saying he lost all his money??
Okay right but why would “cloud native” as the community’s marketing for it be considered a red flag. Someone who doesn’t know better would think oh “cloud native” Kubernetes is evil. When really the moniker mostly means it was designed to be highly scalable, to interface with public cloud API’s, among many other decisions that differentiate traditional enterprise I.T. software (which like Cisco products) could have its own fair share of “evilness” to be avoided.
My point was that O.P. should clarify why that’s such an immediate red flag for them.
To future readers I consistently use “cloud native” software on my bare metal computers at home. It’s mostly a marketing term to reflect “modern ness” in software features to be run on a public cloud.
In my experience cloud native doesn’t mean it’s on Google, or Microsoft’s privacy stealing software because they’re marketing to you that you can host it yourself on the public cloud.
Why?
The CNCF has a number of awesome projects that live up to FOSS values.
Because X is dying anyway?
I mean Arch is what you make of it. It can be as lightweight and minimal as you want it to be based on your installation decisions.
“Lightness” in what sense are you after?
Size of distribution? # of packages?
Otherwise you’ll be using basically the same kernel images.
Maybe you should be custom compiling your own Linux Kernel to be even more “lightweight”.
Tech news is so general. Consumer hardware? Datacenter hardware? Robotics? Mining equipment?
Could be basically any industry at all.
But yeah Hackernews, Arstechnica, and more specific items like LWN and personal blogs for programmers/creators I admire and find interesting.
When onboarding takes forever and the customer doesn’t want to move up their deadlines.
Yeah but what restrictions does NASA put on the scripts. Most languages are similar enough if you neuter them down to rudimentary forms.
I doubt they’re NPM installing these packages.
I love mine. Had audio streaming break for me but switched my desktop to Linux. Back to perfect function.