Date based version numbers is just lazy. There’s nothing more significant about a release in two weeks (2025.x.y) than today (2024.x.y).
At least with pride versioning there’s some logic to it.
Date based version numbers is just lazy. There’s nothing more significant about a release in two weeks (2025.x.y) than today (2024.x.y).
At least with pride versioning there’s some logic to it.
How does migrating go codeberg solve the issue of false star ratings?
I think is the logic used for Linux kernel versioning so you’re in good company.
But everyone should really follow semantic versioning. It makes life so much easier.
Can you really take a source seriously when it presents every statement so emotionally and dramatically
The trouble with the truth inside America’s most famous five-sided building exploded anew Thursday
UK to be more precise. England doesn’t have a devolved parliament
It’s ridiculous we’ve been over complicating matters for so long. It’s far easier knowing legal arguments can be determined simply by who’s more willing to jerk off the administration.
Is anyone able to read IPA without that key? This is where I get lost. It’s an entire new language for a very specific thing so I can’t imagine anyone but language scholars finding it useful
How does one actually read these? Wouldn’t phonetic spelling be infinitely more digestible?
I shared my personal experience and you turned it into a distro war.
My original comment was pointing out this entire post is an unnecessary distro war. Except now WSL is the battleground. It’s so unnecessary. I’m genuinely surprised anyone gives a shit about WSL.
People using WSL tend not to be total newbies and may well run into real issues (such as the ones that prompted me to switch), thanks to snap.
OK, that’s a different assumption to me. I kinda presume anyone toying with WSL is one of their early experiences with Linux.
My experience was if you’re fiddling enough with WSL that you’re running into issues then you may as well ditch Windows and move to Linux.
Hence arguing over which WSL distro someone is using is irrelevant. You’re better of persuading them to try dual booting Linux instead.
I’m pretty sure a year ago there was a set of users claiming systemd was the worst thing to happen to Linux since snap.
So why are you advising to change the default install of Debian to include it?
Every recipe that works for Ubuntu works for Debian,
May as well just install Ubuntu then.
For the cutting edge 2% of new stuff, newbies are increasingly better off on Debian.
Citation needed. Pretty sure this is either personal opinion or anti-canonical, anti-snap ideology.
Targeting WSL users with this rhetoric is ridiculous. If you want to tailor your own systems outside the norm then sure go ahead but claiming things will be easier for a newbie by running specific commands they don’t have the context or expertise to comprehend is absurd.
@adam431@lemmy.world @Adam431@lemm.ee
Why the new account? Did your last account get banned from spamming posts from your own blog?
if you encounter problems just search online or ask AI, it’s fairly simple
Good luck with that. All the answers are going to assume WSL is using Ubuntu.
Why do Linux advocates try so desperately to overcomplicate things?
Can’t you you just be satisfied a Windows using is experimenting with Linux. Why does it have to be your ideological strain of Linux they use.
Docker might be solution here.
But from my experience most python scripts are absolute junk. The barrier for entry is low so there’s a massive disparity in quality.
They give incremental discounts each time you renew so even if the price increases you’ll probably find you’re spending less each time.
Jetbrains licenses are like £100 a year. What commercial project isn’t able to cover that cost.
This has been one of my biggest frustrations while learning Rust. I’m coming from .NET which has an incredible wealth of official System and Microsoft libraries all of which are robust and well documented.
Rust on the other hand has the bare minimum std library, with everything else implemented by the community. There isn’t even a std async library. It’s insane.
Even the popular community libraries are severely lacking in documentation or inexplicably unmaintained.
Rust has a ton of potential but it desperately needs so broad funding to align the fundamentals to a decent standard.
A quick glance and this seemed nothing to do with self documenting code and everything to do with the flaws when code isn’t strictly typed.
They are just iso country codes though, so it is just the luck that some have become so popular.
Some countries are pretty strict that their tlds must be local or at least provide translation in the regional language. The cook islands for instance have prime opportunity with .co.ck but they refuse the to let people take advantage
Yep. The governments typically select who administers the tld and then get a lump sum or portion of the revenues.
For .ai
it was 10% of their GDP in 2023 which is insane…
The registration fees earned from the .ai domains go to the treasury of Government of Anguilla. As per a New York Times report, in 2018, the total revenue generated out of selling .ai domains was $2.9 million.[13][14]
In 2023, Anguilla’s government made about US$32 million from fees collected for registering .ai domains. That amounted to more than 10% of gross domestic product for the territory.[
For an internal project that’s fine, and under semantic versioning you can basically break anything you like before v1.0.0 so it’s probably valid