liara

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yeah how DARE he look out for his rights and protect himself by knowing what he's legally allowed to do! Don't you know, this is America where corporate interests trump individual rights?

Oh wait, you're from Canada? Shit.

(Just kidding, in Canada, corps fuck us just as hard, if not harder)

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Oh I absolutely agree that it sounds like empty, desperate promises on their behalf at this point. I think it's safe to say (given the OP) that Reddit has ruined every ounce of credibility and good-will they may have had as a result of their lies and backtracking. I wouldn't trust them one bit with their attempts at garnering more good-will at this point.

[–] [email protected] 18 points 1 year ago (5 children)

I think the thought of major subs going private out of protest has them at least a little worried. Worried enough to try to backtrack on the changes that will affect moderators to "give them more time", but only if they don't participate in the blackout.

https://old.reddit.com/r/ModCoord/comments/143rk5p/reddit_held_a_call_today_with_some_developers/jnbjtsc/

Sounds a lot like threatening at this point (and who knows if they'll follow through with their promises if even one sub goes dark), which ironically is the same thing they accused the Apollo dev of doing to the Reddit team.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I was a major opensuse tumbleweed fan to start, but this period has been fading for me as well. I can't really put my finger on it, but several prominent members of the community just seem to always rub me the wrong way. It's kind of like being told to go do it yourself if you want to see something done, but then being told you did the thing you wanted done wrong or you're using OpenSUSE incorrectly if you feel the urge to do the things you tried to do. I've also noted the hostility to KDE in various exchanges as well, which is very weird since a lot of KDE development is apparently done on OpenSUSE.

I have a major server running MicroOS that I'm looking to ditch and do a re-install on, but "stable, rolling" is a hard niche to fill when you might be looking for some extra kernel features that can't/don't ship directly in the Linux kernel. I'm stuck for now, but keen on the lookout for a decent replacement that fills the same niche as MicroOS for a server.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

I couldn't agree more. I think that tying yourself to a specific distribution is a good way to keep yourself in a box. I think the better question here is "What DE do you prefer?" and then choose your distro based on your preferences for desktop environments while keeping other things in mind (i.e. frozen packages or rolling base).

I, like yourself, pretty much require KDE to be functional on my desktop. A great distro for me is one that ships new KDE releases without much delay (or at least, one that's not completely unreasonable) without having to wait for the next LTS release to get all the goodies. This narrows down the choices pretty substantially as there aren't a lot of distros that meet this spec:

  • Arch
  • Tumbleweed
  • Fedora
  • NixOS (debatable on the keeping KDE up-to-date iirc)
  • KDE Neon
  • Ubuntu with PPAs (least favourite way to stay up to date though)

I prefer to have a rolling (or close to rolling base) so that really only leaves me with the top 3 options.

I'm not really here to shill for KDE, but just encourage folks to find the DE that feels most comfortable to them and then work on your requirements from there.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago

I am the owner of repository called swizzin -- it's a collection of shell scripts aimed primarily at installing applications in the "seedbox" category on Debian and Ubuntu servers.

It's not a particularly glamorous project, being written in the majority of bash, but over the 8 years of me maintaining this script and keeping up with the intricacies of linux, my skills as a Linux Sysadmin went from amateur hobbyist to self-employed-entrepreneur to gainfully-employed. It's been a crazy ride altogether and never would have imagined that starting to work on a hobbyist project could have landed me an actual career.