@soatok@eltrac@cheeaun it's reasonably easy to think of various scenarios. But I suspect that whatever I say, the reply will be "that's not a real problem" or "there are other ways to protect against that".
Suffice it to say that I'm not worried about specific scenarios that I can envision. It's the ones that may happen in the future I'm concerned about. Proving the chain of changes is what I think itbis is just a good idea. Especially since my primary project uses SHA1 hashes.
@eltrac@cheeaun@soatok from my perspective, I want to have the history included in the signature, and I don't think there is an alternative to gpg for that.
@thomasfuchs the interesting thing is that one of the few things it can do that is useful is to find some information you're looking for, but to do that you have to fight the damn thing to actually give you that, instead of a predigested version that is often outright wrong in the most important ways.
And it's only useful for this because search has been so utterly enshittified that it's next to useless.
Imagine this technology being used to build an actual search engine instead of whatever the current thing is.
Don't you love it when you were asked for an expert opinion on a topic, and you reply with a correct answer given the particular circumstances that the question was asked in...
And then someone comes back and said "why should we do it that way, that's not what [my favourite llm] said"
I've had to force myself to not reply immediately, as the tone of my reply would probably get me in trouble.
@skinnylatte they're seems to be this widespread belief in the us that there is a single correct way to say/do things.
As it turns out, things that are offensive in one place are not in others.
A lot of things that are perfectly normal in the us will mark you as really rude in Sweden. Likewise, there are things I do in Singapore that's perfectly normal that would get me ostracised in the us
@skinnylatte and the number of food vloggers here in Singapore (and in Malaysia). It's wild.
I mean, sure, some of them are influencer type people, but it's an indication of something that I don't think exists to the same extent in other places.
@libreoffice Do you know if odfdom-java is maintained? It has a bunch of outdated dependencies, but there seems to be at least some activity in the source repository.
There is also something odd with the versioning, where there is a 1.0.0-beta from 2019, but the latest release is from 2023 is 0.12.0. This causes dependency check tools to be somewhat confused.
Or is there perhaps an alternative library I should be using instead to connect to a running instance of Libreoffice?
Who started the trend to stuff the title bar of windows full of buttons? I sure love playing "find the background" every time I want to move a window.
Also, at aome point someone looked at the colours for active vs. inactive windows and said: "you know what would make this better? If these colours were completely indistinguishable. All users will love that"
Lisp, Emacs, APL and a bunch of other stuff.From Sweden, living in Singapore.I always work on a bunch of projects. My current major ones are:A graphical frontend to Maxima: https://github.com/lokedhs/maxima-clientKap: An APL-based programming language: https://codeberg.org/loke/array#lisp #commonlisp #apl #retrocomputing #linux #kap #climaxima #emacs #atari #fedi22