

no reason to believe it violates “democratic values”
In my country the law is one of the pillars of democracy, but you do you 👍
no reason to believe it violates “democratic values”
In my country the law is one of the pillars of democracy, but you do you 👍
And I think “vibe” means that they have no experience with programming so they can’t read the code they copy.
At least it was Americans talking on an american platform. I wouldn’t be surprised if we had french Europeans leaders having occasionally this kind of discussions on Microsoft Teams or some Google chat.
On Signal you can verify user identify, and you should absolutely do it if were to discuss national security maters.
This is not a hidden feature, I think it’s designed to prevent man in the middle attack. It also work against the “oops I accidentally added a journalist to my conversation no one should know of”, which is so dumb that no one saw this coming 😅
If you were to discuss national security maters with someone, please just verify your safety numbers, IRL or through another safe and verified channel 🙄
Plus, I don’t find slack super competitive in terms of features & usability.
I remember having a much better experience with mattermost.
Can we stop benchmarking text generation models on things they’re not designed to do and start educating people on what they actually can do?
Oh no we can’t, there’s already hundreds of commercial services…
I think I was thinking about desktop apps when I answered, but I feel out of context now 😬
Isn’t it about a web engine being roughly 60MB? 😕
Wasn’t XP more reliable than the average of Windows versions?
But it’s easier to block trackers & ads on a PWA, and life made me very cynical about “the industry” 😅
Is ‘damn’ a swear word or is it just the child being cute?
He would have to eat part of a battery. It was, he figured, maybe the only way to solve his problem.
I thought this was metaphorical 🤦 My idiocratie radars are all saturating since the middle of the article.
Sadly I kept it private because it exposes a bit of my company’s network structure (with encrypted secrets, but still…) :/
It’s not the best experience though : the pencil doesn’t work as well as in Fedora (GNOME doesn’t detect tablet mode, which only seems to affect buttons behavior) and it recompiles the kernel everytime it needs to be updated (very often, so I pinned a version).
I’d say arch is a great distro if you love to tinker a lot and/or want to learn a lot about the Linux ecosystem. If you don’t recognize yourself in previous sentence I’d probably stick with fedora 🤷
I briefly used Fedora (Gnome) on my SP7 which worked super well. Then I moved to NixOS because I’m a nerd 🤓
Man, we’re not even 3 months in (6%) and everyone starts preparing for world war 3. Americans needs to step up now.
Well, the comment that showed bust above yours shows an article from NYT doing exactly that 😮💨
(From webghodt0101 : https://lemmy.ml/comment/17118372)
println!("{comment}");
C’mon, it’s 2025!