

Or
base64 -d <<< 'dXIgbW9tCmhhaGEgZ290dGVtCg=='
Can’t remember if <<< is POSIX or not, but pretty sure it works in bash and zsh.


Or
base64 -d <<< 'dXIgbW9tCmhhaGEgZ290dGVtCg=='
Can’t remember if <<< is POSIX or not, but pretty sure it works in bash and zsh.


Yes, but you’re talking about a fully embeddable browser engine that doesn’t exist yet. I want to see it come to fruition, too, to be clear.
Wouldn’t it be easier to fork Gecko and use that? Or Blink/WebKit? And some already exist (LibreWolf, Brave), so if those aren’t satisfactory replacements then I can’t see Servo being a silver bullet.
To be clear, I love the idea of Servo and I think the browser ecosystem needs to not be an oligopoly. I just don’t think it’s a silver bullet. I do think it can be a step towards an open future of the web and I am fully on board.


I think Firefox is still (among) the best option(s) and I have no plans to switch, but their AI pivot definitely has me concerned.


Not sure that will save you. Easier to make a browser with a fork than just a library.
If I have a container with an isolated kernel, is it just a VM?


Ya, this pic just gave me flashbacks. I thought I had buried that for good.


This is definitely to ensure continued reliance on oil and gas.


Consider a Brazilian Lemmy instance. They will have to remove everything anyone complains about.
There’s no way to tell legitimate requests from illegitimate and as soon as volunteer admins are overwhelmed with requests, they will have to automatically delete any post that they are notified about.
All the power is on the side of the complainant. Nonprofit Lemmy hosts would go bankrupt in minutes trying to fight it.


100 year copyright is fucking ridiculous, but I still think copyright has its place. The enemy of my enemy is a useful ally?


They’ve both been mentioned multiple times already, but I think you need to try out both Logseq and Obsidian and pick whichever you like better. They are both very similar, but take slightly different approaches. There are also plugins for each to make them behave more like the other.
I personally use Logseq because it’s open source and I like the daily journal and outlining features. I used and enjoy obsidian, too, and it has plugins to improve journals and outlining.


I am not an IP lawyer, but to me, service manuals and wiring diagrams are not creative works and therefore not subject to copyright anyway.


Of the 50ish Amiga floppy disks we had, I think Bubble Bobble was the only one my dad actually bought.
You’ve just hit the article limit with your free Sifted account
Apparently the article limit is zero.
Edit: Mirror


Ya, I’m just joking about apps, or especially scripts, not handling it properly.


A step in the wrong direction, in my opinion. It’s public, so to hide it behind an api seems misleading.


It’s all public data. Lemmy clients don’t let you see it, though, but there might be some exceptions. Other platforms like kbin/mbin just let you view the votes for any post or comment.


Sounds like they might just be an asshole. Maybe remind them that all of their upvotes and downvotes are public.
Occam’s razor.