It has been in exponential growth since the signal was distinguishable from the noise, and exponentials do not have inflection points…
The only inflection we can expect is when it reaches 1/4 of saturation.
It has been in exponential growth since the signal was distinguishable from the noise, and exponentials do not have inflection points…
The only inflection we can expect is when it reaches 1/4 of saturation.
There’s an ecosystem of entire instances with crazy rules.
The fact that Lemmy just doesn’t become unusable with all this brokerage tells a lot about the benefits of a distributed system.
Tony Lazuto says you should delete System32
Yep, different licenses have different consequences.
The same way, if the BSD internet stack was GPL, we wouldn’t have an internet at all.
Interesting, yep, passwd fails for me too.
That’s quite a bad way to express yourself.
But then, the Lemmy front-page sending unsuspecting new people into a place where they will censored if they try to speak against of dictators and human rights violations isn’t a good thing. So yeah, Lemmy is better with the ML not listed.
On the website:
/etc/password
Let’s see.
EDIT: Well, maybe the Cloudfare filters are region-dependent.
That’s yet another great joke that GNU ruined.
That’s a very good point.
It applies to more things than software projects. Like new companies keep innovating until they succeed. Political organizations keep pressing for change until they get some small gain. People are eager to throw themselves at work until they get something they care about…
Hum… That implies that at least 30% of some subclass of projects are successful.
Oh, they absolutely should. A “Jarvis” would be great.
But that thing they are pushing has absolutely no relation to a “Jarvis”.
Well, ok. I don’t really plan to do that. It was a joke.
I do wish it was something viable, though.
That’s why I plan to move my servers into an L4 clone.
It’s close to 1 in 20 PCs nowadays. It’s growing very quickly, and has been adopted in non-irrelevant amounts for a few years already.
The people that come up with country names do like a light trolling.
Not as evil as they want. They can be just as evil as “a little bit better than the other villains”, and not any bit more.
Besides, nobody believes they are the good guys.
*~
But you should really have a backup system. And often you should have a version control system too.
“People complain about C’s security issues because it’s too easy to learn” was absolutely not on my bingo card either.
The same for “Javascript frameworks exclude the less experienced”.
“Rotting” is a state that won’t last past the middle 30s. By 2056 they’ll be fully decomposed.