It’s not like there are no storage solutions available. They are not always very efficient, but if you have a surplus, whatever.
It’s not like there are no storage solutions available. They are not always very efficient, but if you have a surplus, whatever.
KDE Connect is amazing. Also works without KDE.
Not true about xmpp in general. There are modern clients out there.
What’s your problem with xmpp?
Nice. I like the idea of simple and small. I’ve had a look at Plan 9 some years ago and had the impression it was mostly dead. Nice to hear that there is some movement.
People using typewriters often used two spaces after a full stop.
Amazing. Do you feel that it has a future?
Thanks for the interesting point! I learned something today. I guess it all depends on your use-case, whether flatpaks make sense or not.
A floss project’s success is not necessarily marked by its market share but often by the absolute benefit it gives to its users. A project with one happy user and developer can be a success.
I’m not against probabilistic models and the like. I merely try to capture part of the reason they are not always well received in the floss community.
I use LLMs regularly, and there is nothing rivalling them in many use cases.
Flatpaks won’t get their libs updated all at once by just updating a library. This can be very bad in cases like bugs in openssl. Instead of just updating one library and all other software benefiting from the fix, with flatpaks, you need to deal with updating everything manually and waiting for the vendor to actually create an update package.
I’m not 100% sure about this. Flatpak has some mechanisms that would allow to manage dependencies in a common fashion.
This and on top of being inexact, it’s not understandable and un-transparent. These are two of the top reasons to push for free software. Even if the engine executing and teaching models are free, the model itself can’t really be considered free because of its lack of transparency.
I think it’s a short term vs long term debate. In the short term snaps are nice. They might help you get that software you want right now. In the long term though, it will only take away some of your rights and make you into a product.
There are also some interesting things to say about wording. Specifically consumer vs user. Software is not consumed, it’s used and depending on the specific software, the user might be abused by the people producing and controlling the software.
I like the looks of them
A symmetrical profile, when having a non zro angle of attack, is actually not symmetrical anymore.
Toll, vielen Dank!
Can only second this
Recycling un biologisches Abbauen ist was anderes
To get a wider space than between words. Computers usually adjust spaces automatically so you don’t need to do it yourself.