just another way of staying ignorant and insensitive to those events.
I don't really see how that follows. Would you mind elaborating?
just another way of staying ignorant and insensitive to those events.
I don't really see how that follows. Would you mind elaborating?
I'm a dev, and I'm the opposite. At my work, we use main over master. I thought it was a little silly when we first switched, but now I'm used to it. It's an arbitrary label anyway -- could easily use trunk/branch from SVN or release/develop or any number of other labels to keep track of code.
Hell, we got a new dev on the team a month or two ago, and he tends to name things 'feat/do-the-thing' instead of 'feature/make-it-go'.
It's not as big a deal as people online make it out to be.
Bypass the whole debate, adopt SVN's 'trunk/branch' terms.
Great response, thanks for writing this. I live in the US, and your Coon -> Cheer cheese reminds me of Land O'Lakes butter -- there was a brouhaha over a decision to remove a Native American woman from the packaging. Same result, it's still in the butter section of the market.
My point is that small token changes cost virtually nothing
Well-put. I've been in the position of complaining about this type of change before, and this is a perfect counterpoint to that mindset. I've often said "What do we want? Police to face accountability when they commit crimes! What do we actually get? We're going to use the term 'main' instead of 'master' for programming things!"
What we so often forget in that moment of "What, I have to re-learn some terminology? Ugh, friction!" is exactly your point about small courtesies. Something doesn't have to be a Big Damn Deal to be worthwhile.
A long time ago, in a job not so far away, I worked on a computer project where we were using Apache Jackrabbit.
I quickly learned that I needed to search for Apache Jackrabbit and not just Jackrabbit -- vibrators weren't relevant to the project.
What do we want?
For police who commit crimes to have accountability!
What do we get?
We're going to yell at people who use the 'outdated' 'master/slave' terminology!
Did you reply to the wrong comment?
So you're saying copyright infringement is on par with speeding or parking past the meter's end? Eh, fair enough.
If you do something illegal, you should be arrested.
Copyright infringement lawsuits are a far cry from bomb threats or the like.
Eh, sometimes "No, thank you" is also appropriate.
I could never bear to watch any of his speeches. Too cringe painful.
Yeah, I can't really explain it. Seems kinda silly, doesn't it?