Federated git repos doesn't mean that the source code will be replicated across instances. It just means you can do things like create tickets and pull requests across instances.
eratic
Is it? I just have it auto-generate in my IDE with snippets. If I was using TS I would still document using TSDoc anyway. You can use jsconfig.json
instead.
Personally I'd rather use JSDoc in my own projects for type annotations and call it a day. I find TS a bit annoying but that might be because I'm not that familiar with it.
I was already on my way out of reddit before the API pricing changes, but not being able to use my choice of app was the final nail in the coffin. I had noticed just how much time I was spending looking at my phone doing nothing but scrolling through stuff, reading things I didn't care for. I spend so much time looking at screens as part of work, recreation, and socialising that I knew I needed to drop my usage. Return to monke.
Using federated services after going cold turkey for about 2 months, I now have a much healthier relationship with it. I like how its smaller and I don't get the feeling of missing out on something if I wasn't constantly checking. I started feeling calmer and generally happier.
LETS. FUCKING. GO.
Steam deck (LCD), managed by EmuDeck.
And then my beefy PC for anything too unoptimized to run on the deck (and to do dumb shit like raytracing)
I've been warning about this for nearly a decade. The octopuses are testing us, and it won't be long before we start seeing a mass invasion coming in from the west.
Considering Trustarc themselves have nothing to gain in allowing vendor tracking for services that use this, and the primary goal being to "ensure you remain compliant with global privacy regulations" (their words). Unless their market audience are services who want it to be as intentionally shit as possible? Maybe.
That is just lemmy.
Updated. It pulled it from the webpage title