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Joined 9 months ago
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Cake day: December 29th, 2023

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  • IMO too much “Tutorial”, not enough Review. For example:

    The spectrwm workflow is unique. It took me awhile to become acquainted with the standard flow and gain comfort in using it. I did have to bend, fold, and spindle the environment a bit

    You haven’t written a single word on how it’s different from any tiling manager, nor what and why you changed.

    Generally the article feels like the first comment in unixporn, where you list out your relevant dotfiles. The only extra information is that you like it, and a list of dependencies for your config.






  • If you don’t do anything crazy, it will be stable, exactly like any other distro

    Tell me you haven’t used a stable distro without telling me you haven’t used a stable distro.

    Do you know why Debian, a stable distro, releases noncritical updates every ~2 years? Because they test their packages and make sure grub doesn’t release a faulty update and leave your machine in an unbootable state.







  • Regarding Vivaldi: Why isn’t Vivaldi browser open-source?

    To save anyone else from losing time on this bullshit:

    They’re scared of their FOSS fork being forked. The rest of the article is just an attempt to make them sympathetic, and muddy the waters. That’s why GPL > BSD

    A new project based on our code might implement features that are fundamentally in opposition to our ethics (e.g., damaging to privacy, human rights or to the environment). Even though we would not be associated with the project in any way, it can deeply affect how people see Vivaldi (and how we see ourselves), damaging a reputation we have taken pains to earn.

    Fuck off



  • Suse would get more hate if they stopped working with opensuse.

    And that doesn’t extend to Fedora and free RHEL licences? Or all of the FOSS projects redhat is funding and contributing to? No demerits for Suse helping MS pressure the entire Linux community for over a decade?

    Canonical provides their stuff publicly, except for long term support after five years, but that decision does get hate.

    You can still get the redhat source code with the free licence, GPL ensures that. You just can’t act like Oracle, reskin RHEL, and sell enterprise support for it.

    Meanwhile there are businesses that literally don’t release any of their improvements to FOSS software because it’s running on their servers and so they don’t have to. Now that really goes against the core ideology of GPL 2 which is: “I give you my code, you give me your changes”.

    Publicly traded companies almost always make shitty capitalist decisions. Now, remember that canonical sold user data to Amazon, played ads in the terminal, and that their IPO is still in the works.