







I started using Helix a few weeks ago and I’m in love. I don’t want to spend multiple weekends figuring out the ideal plugin configuration of neovim. Helix seems to do everything I want it to do and nothing I don’t, right out of the box.


Not an embedded dev. What’s the Rust situation in the embedded world? Is it ever used?


Well it kind of stands for nothing, because at the center of this onion is GNU, which is recursive. It stands for “GNU’s Not UNIX”, so the G in GNU stands for GNU.
many people call slugs, snails, and worms bugs too. So any invertibrate with the right vibes


yes


When I wake up all I can think about is brushing my teeth and eating breakfast
it is though


I was wondering why we didn’t see any photosynthesizimg animals


please god no


People on here are the most pro FOSS but luddites at the same time when it comes to AI.
This is consistent. Do you realize who the Luddites were?


Sinn Féin in Ireland, O Bloco and PCP in Portugal, PTB-PVDA in Belgium


most of them, I think


That’s honestly fine in your application code, but very frustrating to see in library code on crates.io. Nobody wants library code to panic over some nonessential functionality that the calling code could’ve recovered from.


Rust programmers writing library code
You could say this about all western “democracies”
The ancient greeks did not consider electoralism to be democracy. They used a combination of direct democracy and sortition. And it should be apparent now that they were right, and we’ve been played for fools for 200 years by the capitalist class who holds all of the true power in our states.


maybe


Fedora Silverblue (GNOME) or Kinoite (KDE) are great for a “hands-off” OS. They are atomic so very hard to accidentally fuck up the system. Apps are installed easily via the GUI software center. I tried both when I switched to Linux and found I loved the simple but powerful and delightful-to-use experience of the GNOME desktop.


Oh, the flowers. The leaves are edible and even taste good aside from the bitterness