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Cake day: June 18th, 2023

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  • Honestly this part of the XKCD meme never sat right with me. No self respecting emacs person would ever bind a command to C-x M-c

    Meta after Ctrl rubs me the same way languages that use Subject Object Verb order do.

    Like, you can do it, but it feels icky.

    Also, you’ve gone to the trouble of creating a ‘butterfly’ key. Just use that.


  • Why should only the minorities that excel deserve a good life?

    Why do the mediocre majority get to live a good life while the mediocre minority don’t?

    Let people be mediocre and instead we need to make life better for everyone.

    I fairly certain you’re a troll, it’s patently obvious on a site like lemmy. Heck I’m even confident you’re going to respond to this because I used a magic keyword, I won’t. This is meant for the normal people reading this


  • I agree. The recent EU ruling has atleast fixed that problem for EU citizens while the rest of the world catches up.

    We were however discussing browsers in the context of desktops in the original thread. On MacOS, other engines are allowed.

    Your issue is with apple’s draconian policy on ios, not webkit.

    Further, two F1 cars using the same engine can perform vastly differently depending on how they’re tuned and how the car is built. While I do concur that it is criminal to not let us strap a jet engine to the f1 car, doesn’t mean that there aren’t differences between the currently legal cars beyond the coat of paint.



  • Skye@lemmy.worldtoLemmy Shitpost@lemmy.worldFF Evangelists
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    7 months ago

    Hi, not the Original Commenter but an occasional user of Orion.

    It is webkit based but has full compatibility for all Firefox and Chrome extensions. Plus in my experience it’s really fast at loading stuff - noticeably so.

    It’s being developed by the people behind the Kagi search engine which is also really good





  • I agree. I think that’s why nix-os is getting so popular these days.

    I love the idea of declarative system builds even beyond just reproducability. The idea that you can essentially make your own distro without much difficulty is really cool.

    Plus all the benefits of roll backs, light backups, etc.

    Plus if you can dig deep enough you can craft a system that never breaks by pinning certain versions.

    One of these days I want to check it out. As well as LFS. Oh but for the want of time.



  • I don’t know if that’s a widely recognized term.

    Pacman used to be really bad at removing unneeded dependencies. I think pretty much every package manager has this facility now. For instant apt auto remove.

    Suppose you installed gnome to try it out, gnome installs like 1000000 packages. The thing about some of those dependencies is that they’re really useful. It’s not uncommon for another package you have installed to use it as an optional dependency. In that case it doesn’t get flagged for autoremoval when you uninstall gnome.

    When you apply this logic a couple layers deep they start to compound.

    Also libraries and random python scripts tend to just exist forever in your system long after you used it lol.

    I started developing the habit of checking what dependencies are being installed and to uninstall immediately when I realize I don’t need it.

    This logic applies to language specific managers like cargo or pip too.

    They all have really good tooling to figure out leaves, orphaned nodes etc. I just didn’t start using those until I got into the arch hype.




  • I’m Indian. I’m willing to bet a bunch of kids who just built their first pc didn’t realize windows was paid just googled free OS and installed Linux lol

    (This is a sarcastic whit at the frugality of my people. Truth is a lot of Indians my age are extremely tech savvy and care about privacy)