it_a_me

joined 1 year ago
[–] it_a_me@literature.cafe 5 points 3 hours ago (1 children)
  1. Due to the failings of the electoral college system, my state was almost guarenteed to vote the same way as it has for the last 30 years
  2. I did not strongly agree with either party/candidate
  3. I dispise the current two party system that both major parties are incentivized to maintain
  4. Voting for a third party who is incentivised to push for change via ranked voting and other methods does aid them even if they don't win

If my state was likely to be contested, I may have voted differently. Voting for a third party in my case however had a greater impact than fighting or joining the tide of my state

[–] it_a_me@literature.cafe 2 points 2 months ago

Custom license that doesn't meet the FSF's definition. Tldr restrictions on redistribution and minor restrictions on modification. It isn't on fdroid's main, but they host a fdroid compatible one with a out of date version of Grayjay

[–] it_a_me@literature.cafe 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I'd look into the git-maintenance's prefetch task. From what I understand, that is more or less what you are looking for. Then just run any old http(s) server and clone them from that https://git-scm.com/docs/git-maintenance

[–] it_a_me@literature.cafe 3 points 5 months ago (1 children)

There is also writefreely. It is fairly basic, but says it supports "publish[ing] to multiple blogs from one account". Haven't really used it, but it looks kinda cool imo

https://github.com/writefreely/writefreely

[–] it_a_me@literature.cafe 6 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I'm not an expert on btrfs, but I assume the inconsistencies come from deduplication, metadata, and maybe compression. I think some of them just count raw block storage, and some include the cost of metadata.

Traditional du assumes that each file takes up it's full space on disk which isn't always the case on btrfs. When using btrfs backed oci images, storage can easily appear multiple times higher.

I use btrfs filesystem usage /. I'm not sure that it is the "correct" way, but it works fairly well.

[–] it_a_me@literature.cafe 8 points 7 months ago

You can still compile infinity from source with your own api key

[–] it_a_me@literature.cafe 2 points 11 months ago

Slint has fairly decent docs and has worked fairly well for my small projects

[–] it_a_me@literature.cafe 1 points 11 months ago (4 children)

I've gotten tired of weird regex stuff in awk, sed, and grep, so I've moved to perl -E for all but the most basic of things.

[–] it_a_me@literature.cafe 11 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Primary code editor: helix

Graphical debugger and certain IDE features: vscodium

Lots of open source language servers: clangd, rust-analyzer, perl-navigator, ...

Makefile to compile-comands.json: bear

TUI file manager: yazi

Better Grep:ripgrep

Debugger: gdb(gnu debugger)

[–] it_a_me@literature.cafe 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

The main advantage of having a /home partition is that you can easily preserve it during reinstalls or during a distro hop. Reinstalls used to be more common in the past when some distros didn't allow full distro upgrades without reinstalling. See this result which is still ranked #1 on duckduckgo

I personally use a @home btrfs subvolume which has most of the same advantages to me, and additionally allows @home and @root to share the same partition. It also allows me to use luks on everthing without bothering with lvm.

[–] it_a_me@literature.cafe 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Are you sure your screen refresh rate is correct?

[–] it_a_me@literature.cafe 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

They could be refering to the V programming language

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