this post was submitted on 28 Jun 2023
17 points (94.7% liked)

Philippines

1608 readers
4 users here now

Mabuhay at maligayang pag-alis sa Lemmy! ✈️


An abandoned community for the Philippines and all things Filipino! 🇵🇭


Started out as a Reddit alternative during the blackout from Jun 12-21, 2023 with over 1k members in just a few days. Fizzled faster than the "I Didn't Do It" kid after a month until it became the internet's Centralia in less than a year.

Image

image


image

Filipino artists whose works were featured on our daily random thread covers.

Image

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
17
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by the_yaya to c/philippines
 

Welcome to the RD thread!

This is a place for casual random chat and discussion.

A reminder for everyone to always follow the community rules and observe the Code of Conduct.

Image

Mobile apps:

Quick tips:

Footnotes:

  • Report inappropriate comments and violators
  • Message the moderation team for any issues
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] megane_kun 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

This is such a first world problem thing, I guess, but here goes.

A software update broke my workflow, thus I can't do much work today. If that's not enough, I'm also temporarily swamped with tasks that all of a sudden got dumped on me today. Shit.

To go back up a little bit, a package that I didn't even think would interact with ungoogled-chromium got updated earlier. I did my updates as usual and rebooted once they're done. Nothing seemed to be broken--until I had to open chromium. It flat-out refused to start. Since there's no time to fix whatever had gone wrong, was forced to do testing on Firefox! (It went well somehow, fortunately, except for some visual quirks and UI not working as they have been in chrome.)

I should really just do software updates (and other maintenance stuff) on weekends, but I've been lulled into a false sense of security, and false confidence of being able to quickly fix things when shit does happen. Oh how wrong I was. Lesson learned, I guess?

Does this mini rant belong here? IDK. I just wanted to vent out a little.

[–] akantha 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I have learned to stop running updates, actually. My last two OS updates (Mac) broke so many things in my dev environment that finding a solution wasn't easy and led me to reformat my computer both times.

I should really think about setting up a backup.

[–] megane_kun 3 points 1 year ago

Minsan din kasi kailangan ng updates to keep stuff up and running eh. I've been advised when I first installed this OS I'm using (btw), that I should at least go over the list of updated packages in order to at least anticipate any problems and to decide to delay updating until there's enough time to deal with them.

The person who recommended my current OS to me said: "updating is a user error," and while hyperbolic, I'm starting to see where that sentiment is coming from.

And yes, setting up a backup is a really good idea--though I'd be the first to admit that had I not been dragged kicking and screaming into making a back-up, I would never have done it. There's just a big (mental) hurdle, I suppose? Now, my system basically runs a command to sync my files onto a backup. I didn't even have to think about it once the set-up (which is surprisingly minimal, just an rsync command, plus a cron job to run it) has been done.