It's been this way for years. Really?
Anders429
Diesel is well-known for having some of the worst errors in the ecosystem. This is far from the rule.
I would argue that in this case the maintainers are in the wrong for not even responding to the issue, not the reporter responding with memes.
I've seen this same thing happen with Python's type hints. Turns out giving an "escape hatch" type for devs who have no clue what the type actually is leads to a lot of useless type hints.
Wow, they really did not make that clear at all on the contest description.
At what point will llogiq realize no one cares about crate of the week, and simply remove it from the newsletter? Even if there are suggestions, it almost always just amounts to whoever decided to advertise their own niche crate that week. I'm not surprised the community has basically given up on it at this point.
Saw this posted on hackernews yesterday, along with hundreds of comments of people completely misunderstanding the advice given. Glad to not see any of that here.
I usually agree with his takes, but I can't watch more than a minute and a half of a video of his, because it's always an unscripted rant. It's fine though, he usually gets his point across in the first minute anyway, and then repeats himself for another ten minutes.
I think you're spot on. It fits right in to the whole "enshittification" topic that Doctorow wrote about. Everyone started using streaming services like Netflix because it offered such a great user experience; now that they have the user base, unfortunately we are now at the point where Netflix has every motivation to make the platform as shitty as possible to milk as much money from their users as they can.
Wow, I'm really disappointed, it's just full of posts from parody accounts with people in the comments not realizing it isn't real.
Bet you $50 we later learn this guy was orchestrating a supply chain attack.
Did we read the same article? This mentions nothing about infighting between groups.