• 10 Posts
  • 463 Comments
Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: May 31st, 2020

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  • I imagine, you guys might be measuring with two different scales. Early Windows versions were fine, but even back then, a switch to Linux would give you so much more customizability to actually make it yours.

    This is a dumb anecdote, but I switched to Linux from Windows 8, and pretty much the first thing I did, was to figure out how to hide the window titlebars. Mostly because I realized, I could, but they also just took screen space away on my laptop.


  • I am 100% on board with people doing with their body whatever they want. Restricting that is just ridiculous.
    But that also necessarily means, they can decide to do immoral things with their body, which I do not need to be a fan of. And that’s where I’m still somewhat undecided on how to think of the whole sex work industry.

    As you say, to some degree, it is simply mental care for those customers. I do think, the offering should exist.
    But it’s also all too easy for it to become extremely exploitative.

    I’m thinking, in some far-off, progressive future (not sure, if we get there before work stops really being a thing), there would be self-help groups or simply therapy offerings, for those who spend their life earnings on getting sex work done.


  • In my team, 2 out 15 people come to the office regularly, because they prefer the separation of work from free time.

    I can definitely see some benefits from being on-site. You do occasionally just run into people, who can tell you really useful things for your job. And it’s definitely harder to keep track of what my wider team is working on, since we’ve gone mostly remote.

    But those benefits just as well evaporate when “on-site” becomes two or more locations. I’m not going to run into someone who’s in a different office in a different city.
    If I have to actively work together with people from different locations, I will also be wearing headphones all day, not able to socialize with the people around me. That makes it rather pointless to go into the office.

    And yeah, just the flexibility of being at home is really useful. I can take a break from work to load my washing machine. I can sleep until 5 minutes before my first meeting. Or I can walk to the store in the morning, when it’s still cool outside.
    So yeah, personally, I certainly wouldn’t go back to a fully on-site job, unless it’s somehow the best job in the world in other ways.




  • Wow, I’ve definitely seen that before, but I never realized how wild that is. So many companies will start drooling like a dumbass when anything contains the GPL.

    So, it’s not like they can’t ever use GPL software, most do use Linux knowingly or unknowingly. But if you use GPL software in a way the legal department hasn’t seen before, they’ll always feel uneasy about it.

    Frankly, I’m surprised that Java gained any traction in the corporate world at all, then.


  • Ephera@lemmy.mltoAsklemmy@lemmy.mlGPL + butt hole?
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    12 days ago

    You can write any conditions you want into a license.

    That’s what actually differentiates proprietary licenses from open-source licenses.
    Open-source licenses follow certain rules, and you usually select an existing license, so therefore they can be reasoned about, collectively. People often implicitly mean “OSI-approved license”, when they talk of “open-source licenses”.
    Proprietary licenses, on the other hand, can contain whatever bullcrap you want.

    Having said that, I’m not a lawyer, but I imagine, if you also called your license “GNU General Public License”, then a case could probably be made in court, that your license is deliberately confusing.



  • Plasma 6.1 on Wayland now has a feature that “remembers” what you were doing in your last session like it did under X11. Although this is still work in progress

    Well, prepare your butts. I’ve got 20+ virtual desktops and I’m only mildly afraid to log out of them.