

It’s not trust me bro at all. That’s the situation we’re currently in. So if these businesses would be “crazy” to leave all this money on the table and they currently are, what does that say to you?
I know critical thinking is hard, but try.
It’s not trust me bro at all. That’s the situation we’re currently in. So if these businesses would be “crazy” to leave all this money on the table and they currently are, what does that say to you?
I know critical thinking is hard, but try.
The market share is already there and there not doing open source drivers, so I guess you’re empirically wrong. I dunno what else to tell ya.
Well they’re not, so I guess they are. 🤷♂️
I don’t disagree, but at the same time, circle back to my original statement. Even if every single *nix user were to only use open source drivers, that’s still not enough. 4% of the market share isn’t going to change anyone’s mind about *nix support.
Because hardware manufacturers don’t care about 4% market share. They just don’t. They can’t survive by pandering to that 4%, and it costs them time and money to make decent hardware drivers for linux.
Sad truth of it.
This has always been the key. Amazing to me that not many seem to take it seriously.
The same way you do any other project. If you’re interested, you go looking. You find my project which has a link to the repo. A link is a link. You’re simply fighting over where the link goes to, and I’m pointing out that it’s a stupid argument to be had.
Github is an important resource.
And there’s dozens and dozens of replacements available. The issue you’re speaking of isn’t an issue with Github at all. It’s an issue with developers.
If Github going off the map borks your development because PROGRAMMERS can’t use anything but Github, you have much bigger problems than you think.
It does neither. It doesn’t create snapshots of pages at all… It’s a bookmark manager.
https://linkding.link/ is what you’re looking for.
Use the bookmarklet or FF/Chrome extension on a page and it saves it to your server to look at later. Add tags, folders, whatever. You can setup newly added links to be un-archived, and old links to be archived, or basically however you want.
I think you’re kind of missing the point of OSS. Github could completely fall off the face of the earth tomorrow and nothing bad happens. There are dozens of other platforms to facilitate the development of software online. Github is not the end all be all and in the grand scheme is only a small player.
That’s not a bug. You literally told wget to follow links, so it did.
The performance trend line would peak, and then go flat after a certain point. No matter how much hardware you add, the performance won’t increase. Where that exact point is? 🤷♂️ Differs from distro to distro, I would think.
A setting that pulls information from the clear net should be up to the user and not a default setting, IMO.
restic restore --dry-run
Great work man. That’s really the only thing that I’ve found to gripe about. Other than that it was a simple setup and configuration. I particularly like that you hold my hand when changing things like the font. Such a subtle but cool change to add some individuality to it.
Great tool. I just pushed it to production for all my projects.
Doesn’t support docker host names, which is a bummer. You have to use IPv4/6 and the docker IP for services to work correctly. The service setup is also a bit weird. You can’t seem to delete a service once it’s been made. You can only “hide” it. So I just set this up, and mistyped an IP, and now I have a service with only 70% uptime because the first few pings failed due to the mistyped IP. (https://x0.at/ZvM1.png) There doesn’t seem to be a way to reset the uptime, or delete the monitor. You actually have to rename the service monitor to something random, and “hide” it, then remake your service like new.
Seems weird.
Nice dashboard though.
bookmarks
low on disk space
Goddamn boy, how many links you got? A million? lol
wget is the most comprehensive site cloner there is. What exactly do you mean by complex? Because wget works for anything static and public… If you’re trying to clone compiled source files, like PHP or something, obviously that’s not going to work. If that’s what you mean by “complex” then just give up, because you can’t.
It’s likely illegal. The administration would call it theft of service because it’s not authorized and they wouldn’t be wrong. I also don’t see why you would want to do it. You’re giving the IT department at your school complete access to your web history.