I want to take this opportunity to say a big THANK YOU to homestuck developers, who develop homestuck, making it continue to exist and matter. I would like to give a THANK YOU to Toby Fox and the baby is you in particular
personally speaking i trust google a lot more with my data than apple, you really need to see the film "the internship" to really understand how cool and great google is, did you know that they have ping pong tables? and silly hats? an amazing company with benevolent intentions for bettering humanity ::::
@bortzmeyer@mastodon.gougere.fr@helene@p.helene.moe it's not so much of an opinion on my part, it's really more of a feeling. of course, people care, and they want to help me, the fact I have complicated feelings about it is not their problem, and it's not what I mean to say
i am slightly torn up in how to feel about people correcting me when i make mistakes in french (which, ofc, I do constantly), because on the one hand it will help me to improve, and it's better to make embarrassing mistakes to people who don't care about them, but i still die a little bit inside
companies integrating random blockchain nonsense into applications intended for normal users is interesting because if you put the wrong data into a blockchain as a company you are pretty much instantly breaking data protection law
For the second two, I can look at them and at least understand why they ended up doing it, the first one is pretty bad though, this is not the sort of problem which is improved by applying machine learning to it
Discord's blog is an unexpected source of comedy, most of their technical posts are, to be entirely blunt, about them engaging in solutioneering, i.e. coming up with undeniably interesting solutions which nevertheless involve taking on a lot of technical debt where simpler solutions already exist.
@tost@mk.toast.cafe@helene@p.helene.moe croc is what duponin recommended to me, but I'm not so much a fan of having to input a password every time, which from what I've read it looks like this would involve
so, general linux question, I have a few computers on the same network, I want to move files between them, and I'd like to be able to do this in a way that's less dodgy than using scp and having all the computers being able to ssh into each other
thank you for the recommendations! I've done a bit of reading and syncthing looks ideal for what I want, I could probably get something good enough with sftp/ssh but syncthing looks even better
Glad i jernbanene våre / part-time dragon / trade unionist / ask me about rail data / ikke stol på datamaskiner!I will nationalise your pet crabDo not use my posts in news articles or research, or for any commercial purpose, without affirmative permission.Please note that I instance mute most large non-interest-specific mastodon instances.#nobot