I thought that the line was that one supports owning the means of production and the other supports authoritarian governments, am I confused?
I thought that the line was that one supports owning the means of production and the other supports authoritarian governments, am I confused?
I want to add that, like you, I’ve become a big fan of restricting the numbers of ways to do something.
IMO, It’s more time wasted choosing, more time wasted reviewing, and makes it easier to overlook errors. I want more opinionated languages and frameworks.
I kept seeing so many different ones recommended and I kept getting weird issues I didn’t understand with most of them. I don’t often need to make a bootable Linux USB, but every time, Rufus did the job quick and easy.
I’ve been using both Perplexity and Kagi for searching things, and it’s working out pretty well for me. The main thing that I find Kagi useful for is filtering to Fediverse results (which tends to be mostly Lemmy threads).
It’s pretty expensive though…
I was wondering whether what felt like common sense to me was the same as what felt like common sense for others, and I see that between us it’s not.
I’m not gonna bother trying to argue with you, I doubt it would be productive in any way, I’m not gonna change your mind. Additionally, you’ve put a lot of words into my mouth and inferred that I believe a lot of things that I really don’t believe, which is a bit upsetting.
If it were the US vs another democratic country, I would feel like that too.
I’m particularly concerned with China (and Russia) because:
I might have a different perspective though. I’m a fairly recent US immigrant from Canada.
Edit: I’d like to add, my tone may come across wrong over written text, I’m just trying to understand people’s overall perspective and whether mine is different, I’m not trying to argue and I’m not upset at you nor any of the commenters I’ve seen on similar posts.
I’m a bit worried about the amount of people I see making this argument whenever I see posts about a TikTok ban/acquisition.
I’m getting the impression that, either:
Am I correct? Is there a nuance I’m missing?
I can understand concerns over point #2 here, but #1 and #3 seem wild to me.
I think your comment embodies Rust more than any I’ve seen before
That’s what I do all the time, and not on purpose. I don’t know what’s wrong with me
I use main
because, although I never heard of anybody actually getting offended by master
, it costs me nothing to use main
instead. Also it looks prettier and seems to be the new convention ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Disclaimer: I don’t know much about securing the container itself. The considerations I discuss here are mostly networking.
What I’ve personally been doing is using k3s with Cloudflare Tunnel (routed using DNS like in this documentation) as an ingress.
With Cloudflare Tunnel, if you create an application in front of it, you can require authentication and add a list of allowed emails.
I could replace k3s with a different Kubernetes distribution, and/or replace Cloudflare Tunnel with a different ingress (e.g., Tailscale Funnel or more common ingresses like nginx).
Co-pilot can write some small very simple functions for me, sometimes saving me the need to look at documentation. It will still often fail at those, in my experience, and will consistently fail at anything more complex.
It will get better, but currently it’s only a small help.
Great to know this was a bug. It felt a tad immersion breaking for every origin character to be so interested all of a sudden.
I love both proprietary software and open source software, and personally I kinda like this warning.
How much of a concern it is for software’s code to be proprietary, is probably personal opinion. For this reason, maybe yellow is a bit too much? I think making these errors grayscale might be a good middle ground.
Pulling changes should be trivial after you’ve done it a few times.
Good to know! I’ve been thinking of switching my setup to Kubernetes, especially after dealing with some unstable services that need to be run in the correct order.
I do it sometimes, especially when the bug is hard to reproduce and I know exactly what’s causing it. Sometimes it’s quicker to write the tests than to test manually.
I’m a picky eater, or whatever the correct semantics for it are. I don’t enjoy it.
Figuring out what to eat every day is a giant pain, let alone even attempting to eat healthy. It bothers me that other people seem to think it’s some kind of selfish malicious plan. Forcing myself to eat something I don’t like makes me gag.
Anything that involves deception, which unfortunately seems to be most of marketing.
I don’t mind when people just try to get their product out there, just let it be known that it exists and does X thing differently or better. I hate when they mean to deceive. Something that is intended to deceive but isn’t technically a lie is not really better than a lie, to me.