There’s the horror of scientific software written by researchers I’ll share here. They are fired The contract expires every 2 years and users keep using the code if it’s successful. Some projects are closed source, even…
There’s the horror of scientific software written by researchers I’ll share here. They are fired The contract expires every 2 years and users keep using the code if it’s successful. Some projects are closed source, even…
I understand. I’ve been like you every now and then.
AFAIK after Getting Things Done appeared in the beginning of the email era, nobody found a definitive alternative for 20 years. And the GTD way of doing time constraints is “put it in the calendar”.
While each person has their own way of doing things, I’d be surprised if there were a revolutionary alternative to this.
I’ve tried a range of apps for recurring TODOs. Just use calendar events and fucking do it now was my conclusion.
That can’t be… reads articles this is really bad.
Yet, aren’t they restricting redistribution of non-GPL parts?
I just trying to understand RH’s argument here because so far it sounds like they are blatantly burning down GPL, and I don’t think even RH would do that.
Are you saying that RH doesn’t sell RHL to people who will redistribute the source code of RHL?
And are you saying that it is against the GPL?
Genuine question.
That’s like… both iPhone and Android are vender-locked.
Transition from GPL to LGPL or CC. IMHO choosing GPL is pointless in many cases and were chosen rather randomly.
My thought process was that since lemmy is open source, we should be free to add new features without having to battle over philosophies
Off-topic, but reminds me how Mao-ists and Lenin-ists were dictators in disguise of people with principles.
The benefits of Rust turned out to be irrelevant for Lemmy. Then the downside kicks in. To give you some context, sone people Rust is more difficult than C++, which was indeed one of the most difficult (if not the most).
Emacs. That was the first editor I touched on my university’s Fedora. And then I read that it had forks, was customizable with Lisp. I then read more about the Unix community and so on. That was interesting.
Oh, I also use tesseract, and it’s wonderful. Glad to see you turn it into a cross-platform desktop tool.
Checks kbin and kbin app status. Sad, but the burnout part is true at least.