

All public and I regularly link people to my bash functions. Started with git bare repos, moved to stow, now on chezmoi. If I need anything more complex than chezmoi for these I’ll probably give up syncing them altogether.


All public and I regularly link people to my bash functions. Started with git bare repos, moved to stow, now on chezmoi. If I need anything more complex than chezmoi for these I’ll probably give up syncing them altogether.


It’s astounding how many lowlifes are using commit counts to measure impact. It’s just throwing bisectability out the window and promoting stupid tactics for quick returns.


I use them all the time, but that’s just because of Yocto and the need to keep at least the 3 major LTS builds hot in the event something breaks.


Usual tracking and fingerprinting issues. Would need to sandbox it to make it secure, but that then makes the fake traffic easier to identify. Not worth it in the end.


That defeats the privacy and bandwidth reasons you’d want to use uBlock but that’s close to the operating idea of AdNauseam.
<s>Pathetic</s>


This is unrealistic, agile stages aren’t missing unusual pieces that aren’t quite critical but probably should be there anyway.
I just want some doc language that handles conditional sections sanely and has useful appendix tools.


Just cross your fingers nobody attempts to import it…


I think one has to cope with it the same way the inventor of the ice pick had to cope with Walter Jackson Freeman II. You can’t really control what people do with your tools. If you think someone actively destroying lives will bend to the whims of a license, that’s cool. I wish I had that level of optimism. Right now it’s still pulling teeth to get companies to respect GPLv3.
Pinchflat is one of the good containers that doesn’t try to play with ID remapping or anything. You just need a container quadlet like the following:
[Install]
WantedBy=default.target
[Container]
Image=ghcr.io/kieraneglin/pinchflat:latest
Environment=TZ=CHANGEME
Volume=CHANGEME/config:/config
Volume=CHANGEME/downloads:/downloads
PublishPort=127.0.0.1:8945:8945
It’ll run as the quadlet user id by default.


Doesn’t avoiding JS typically structure a website in such a way that the browsers built-in assistive services can cover it easier?
I haven’t heard anyone talk about puppy Linux in a bit. That used to be the go to for ultra lightweight setups.


It does inherently lean into the concept of corporate forks over community forks. A byproduct of prioritizing monetary gain. I think the license is really just a foot in the door to allow for community audits. Realistically I don’t see anyone wanting to contribute to something like this unless the product has slim to no real competition.
All of these alternatives and you missed the best one ripgrep (rg). The other ones in my opinion are nice to have. Recursive multi-threaded grep that respects gitignore files is a must for me.


I’ve also witnessed matrix structure break down when too many methods of communication are used. It’s all very brittle.


“I want to know why this is broken. How to fix it can come later.”


Or override the TERM variable in your ssh config. Setting it to an xterm value has been supported by any niche term I’ve used over the years without sacrificing any of the usual functions.
Arch. Started using it in high school. Never had a reason to switch. Now I’m just regularly frustrated by other distros trying to make things easier by abstracting simple configurations behind layers of custom scripts.
Honestly, I was running into the limits of stow. Want to unstow some configs on a bare machine? I hope you wanted that entire directory to be a symlink. Then I saw that someone had actually fixed that many years ago but the maintainer at the time was caught up in some personal crypto related projects and did not appear to be looking at the mailing list.
Chezmoi fixed that, applied a templating engine and added a data mechanism. In moving my stow configs I realized that application specific config file deployments are nice but shouldn’t be necessary. Templates fill that gap, and meshing them with scripts allows you to do some cool things only when variables change.
Plus I was beginning to play around with go at the time, so it just seemed like a good idea to use something I could contribute to if I needed.
I still don’t think I’m using chezmoi to it’s full potential, but I am fairly proud of the script I use to determine data sources for my waybar config on all of my machines.