I see Chinese hieroglyphs down there, thus I've become Chinese.
raubarno
See what happens if you press "Yes"
*knock knock knock* FBI! OPEN UP!
EXTERMINATE! EXTERMINATE!!
My dark side: I feel disengaged in my duties, I tend to flee away from teamwork and skip deadlines, especially when the workflow is stressful. Of course, mates hate me for that :(
Others' inconsistencies I see: tendency to make careless decisions without thinking twice, or miscommunication (incorrect wording) of intended actions, especially in programming and/or designing things. Also, not admitting an expectation to get some sort of reward/compensation when giving things for free.
Example:
- A: You gave me this, thank you! What can I do/buy to you in return?
- B: No need, thank you.
- (one year later)
- B: I gave you that, so I want you to do something in return.
- A: You told me I'm not obliged to repay you!
- B: You should've understood it by yourself!
- A: ...(Reimu mode activated)
Jokes aside, I am generous but this unspoken liability pisses me off.
Okay. I declare tomorrow to be International throw imperial units day.
Unfortunately, Linux manuals are pretty scattered around. I'll try to find something for you:
- If you want to learn the very basics of Linux command line, here's what I found on the web: http://www.ee.surrey.ac.uk/Teaching/Unix/ ;
- For on how to use GNU user-land tools (Bash, cat, less, grep, sed, etc.), I recommend the GNU manuals which are very well-written: https://www.gnu.org/manual/blurbs.html (example: Bash manual);
- GNU manuals are also downloaded for offline read by default. These manuals are provided with
info
.
- GNU manuals are also downloaded for offline read by default. These manuals are provided with
- For GUI desktop, it depends on what Desktop Environment (DE) you use:
- KDE wiki with tutorials: https://userbase.kde.org/Tutorials
- GNOME app overview with documentation: https://apps.gnome.org/
- If you don't know what DE you use, KDE uses sharp edges for windows and GNOME uses round edges ( 👁️👄👁️ ).
- For system, as @Terumo@lemmy.world pointed out, for system-specific stuff, there's ArchWiki that has topics about everything.
- If you want to understand what are the /usr, /usr/local, /etc, /dev, etc. filesystem directories, you want to look at the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard: https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/FHS_3.0/fhs/index.html
- There is also a free training course for Linux: https://training.linuxfoundation.org/training/introduction-to-linux/
- If you're a developer and want to find out how deep the rabbit hole is, you may want to look at an online book Operating Systems: Three Easy Pieces: https://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~remzi/OSTEP/
EDIT: Forgot this important material:
- If you need to know command-line argument specifics for a particular program, use manpages (For example, to find brief information about
grep
, typeman grep
in your shell, andinfo grep
if you need a complete manual).
By the rising sun, did he mean Japan? Or maybe break the Hakurei Barrier to enter Gensokyo?
Watch ElectroBOOM videos. He provides good comedy with scientific knowledge.
Hi. I understand your rant. Yes, the quality of most frameworks in the wild is pretty low, especially if it is one of the more niche algorithm nobody takes care to audit, or the programming language lacks safety syntax, like C++, which allows writing mixed C and C++ code and only few people understand the necessity of idiomatic C++. And of course, inexperienced devs go the easiest way.
Don't give up and take this as a challenge. It is a skill to understand what the other guy wrote. And this skill takes years to develop.
I see marketing via AI tools and bots unethical. Many things can be done via conventional marketing.
Also, majority of Reddit users are teenagers. The older generation of Reddit has fled away. We must think twice what target audience we want to bring in. I don't want Lemmy to become a place where alt-wing anti-establishment political leaders bait naïve teenagers and take them into the rabbit hole (aka scenario described in The Social Dilemma).