Yeah, would suck if it wound up failing now because of clown signatures. A buffer of real signatures is very good!
syklemil
How does a 36-hour workweek work out to a four-day workweek?
Here in Norway everyone in sneezing distance of a union deal has a five-day workweek at 7.5 hours a day, for 37.5 hours in total. (The law says six days at 8 hours; the half-hour difference is in practice lunch, which is your own time with a union deal and the boss' time without. I think we could go down to 7h a day and get an hour of lunch like our neighbours.)
No, we shouldn't, and yes, you're overthinking, but I am finding myself inching closer to the GNU argument for the desktop/server OS, as I now not only use phone/Linux, but also a bunch of Kubernetes/Linux, with distroless images. It's all using the Linux kernel, and possibly glibc, but it's not Linux as we know it. The desktop/server OS meanwhile might not have GNU coreutils in some years.
But realistically we've been using Linux as the name for the family of desktop and server OS-es for decades now, and if you need to refer to the Linux kernel you call it "the Linux kernel" or just "the kernel".
Earlier GNU wanted HURD as an alternative to the Linux kernel—same GNU OS, different kernel. What instead is happening is that we're keeping the Linux kernel but replacing the GNU part of the OS.
Generally you just need to give as much information as the recipient needs to understand your message. Excess signals that don't add information are what information theory calls noise.
Phabricator was an alternative for a development platform of sorts; development ceased in 2021. They're still running here and there, but I expect them to be in the process of being deprecated.
Yes, but it's likely due to how we use our bodies in a manner that we don't really like, partially because we're on the alert for the waiting to end. Doing something you've chosen to do feels better.
Also, the environment plays a role. It feels more shit to pay a lot of attention to a shitty environment. Same thing as how walkable neighborhoods are usually interesting, while us-style car-brained areas feel like shit to walk or even just exist in, because you're not actually meant to stay there long enough to notice anything.
I thought we were calling the thing you speak Strayan!
Wer braucht denn eigentlich Jon Oliver, wenn wir Jan Böhmermann haben?
Alternatively: Finally I can practice my school German!
Yeah, some genres have a large segment of people who struggle to fit in with the mainstream. I'd like to think that they pick up something about social liberalism vs traditionalism from that, but there's apparently also a significant segment who want as strict traditions as the mainstream, they just want somewhat different traditions.
Not memory safe, so runs into exactly the same regulatory problems that are driving people away from C in the first place.
It seems to be fun for an individual with a hobby, but I wouldn't really expect it to get much into professional spaces.
Same in Oslo
Also not having used Java for decades I'll not comment on the state of their abstractions, but
IMO at the extreme being unable to shed the past means negatively hindering progress. I think modern Java versions show a budding shift in mentality
both reminds me of similar complaints against C++ (and with a sizeable amount of users wishing for an ABI break), and how weird it is to get both complaints like that and over the fact that so many shops are on ancient versions. They've moved slowly, but it doesn't seem like anything was slow enough for a lot of shops, which indicates they likely could've moved faster without changing which versions users would be at today.
There's nothing probable about the combination of a Nordic country and a 9-hour workday.