jdnewmil

joined 1 year ago
[–] jdnewmil@lemmy.ca 7 points 1 month ago (1 children)

There is an implied 6th bit that is zero. Timestamps have a two-second minimum resolution.

[–] jdnewmil@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 months ago

Published in the Journal of Improbable Research?

[–] jdnewmil@lemmy.ca 14 points 2 months ago

I didn't say it was unobtainable. But it might look/behave quite different than the tools you are currently using.

As for Microsoft Exchange, I only use that for work, and my employer would not allow me to connect from my personal machine anyway. I am not saying that you that you have to give up your favorite tools... but I am saying that it you are putting up so many fences then you might as well stay with what you have.

[–] jdnewmil@lemmy.ca 66 points 2 months ago (18 children)

No.

If you ever so carefully paint yourself into a corner then the corner is where you will be stuck. How badly do you want out of your corner?

There are FOSS and SAAS options that could work if you wanted them to... but whether they will depends on you.

Meat eaters trying to become vegetarian for ethical reasons often fail because the "un-meat" options out there don't meet their standards. Success almost always requires some letting go and re-adjusting. If you are not open to that then don't force yourself to put up with something you don't really want.

[–] jdnewmil@lemmy.ca 5 points 2 months ago (1 children)

You are being obtuse. Fiber and cable and DSL are not "ethernet standards" and Ethernet is not used for last mile connections. Re-read the excellent explanation.

[–] jdnewmil@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 months ago

knowledge takes you past hand to mouth living on the edge and creates the opportunity for spare time with which to ask silly questions.

[–] jdnewmil@lemmy.ca 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Did anyone who up upvoted this actually follow the link and look at the script? This is a troll.

[–] jdnewmil@lemmy.ca 2 points 3 months ago

I will just say that I think mermaid is great. I use it via the DiagrammeR package in R and via Quarto. In addition to manually typing in diagrams I sometimes write ad-hoc code that helps me visualize my data (and source code) by emitting one of the relevant mermaid syntaxes.

[–] jdnewmil@lemmy.ca 1 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I would say you are lucky. I lived in my college town for 20years and it started out chock full of co-ops in the 80s and by the time I moved away they were all hardly recognizable or gone. Food co-ops, housing co-ops, internet co-ops... all mutated away from shared labor or were replaced by sole ownerships.

My wife works for an employee-owned engineering company, but they are anything but FOSS in their culture.

I hope these intermediate management structures that combine expertise and collective ownership grow more. But it still isn't a slam-dunk that should be assumed to be the stupidly-obvious approach unless such organizations compete with the grifters... and then their success won't be due to the fact that they are using FOSS but that they present a track record of success as an organization.

[–] jdnewmil@lemmy.ca 3 points 3 months ago

... and there are a gazillion examples where no community forms and the founder burns out. Cheers where it works, but some projects aren't sexy enough to attract a self-sustaining community, and when you don't preselect success stories but choose according to external needs that hit-and-miss experience starts to look less obvious and more like the thing only "smart" people can succeed at.

My objection is to the idea that FOSS is easy... it does require some smarts to succeed with.

[–] jdnewmil@lemmy.ca 9 points 3 months ago (6 children)

Don't get me wrong... I am all for FOSS and I avoid walled gardens, but people have a hard time remembering to take the trash out to the street on the right day. Spending time driving garbage trucks monthly in the local waste management Co-op is not going to fly well. That problem gets solved using money... homeowners are taxed and the local government either hires garbagepeoples directly, or more often they hire a company that takes care of the problem.

Upshot there is money rather than co-op ownership, and frequently for-profit contractors win the day over government ownership. Contractors supply GaaS, we just have to get the bin to the street. So the equivalency here is the need for the public institution known as city government to retain ownership of the waste management system. Not quite "the people", since getting co-op volunteers is, well, erratic at best. And there are a ridiculous number of people out there who are vehemently against government management of actual organizations like this. I am for it, but over and over I see "privatization" win elections.

So I am not seeing how pitching this as "stupidly obvious" will win when "obvious" means hiring a contractor nearly every time.

[–] jdnewmil@lemmy.ca 0 points 3 months ago

I see discussion under blocked individuals using Connections. Maybe related to the client?

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