Journalister är makthavare. Att förneka det är löjligt, missvisade och felaktigt. Annie Croona har trots det skrivit en ledartext i ETC som hävdar att journalister inte har makt och inte är makthavare. Huvudargumentet verkar vara att de har som uppdrag att granska makten. Vilket är ett helt ohållbart argument.
GitHub - ad-on-is/stowman: stowman.sh lets you easily manage your dotfiles using git and GNU stow.
GitHub - ad-on-is/stowman: stowman.sh lets you easily manage your dotfiles using git and GNU stow.
stowman.sh lets you easily manage your dotfiles using git and GNU stow. - ad-on-is/stowmanGitHub
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I liked stow, and used it for quite some time. That being said, it has issues. Issues community members have attempted to solve. Issues the sole maintainer wasn't addressing for quite a few years.
I use chezmoi now. I've still got mixed feelings, but the templating system is neat. Stow seems to have gotten out of it's slump while I was gone. That's good news! Anyone know if they addressed the tree specific folding/unfolding config feature? Not seeing anything in the docs...
Yeah, there are a lot of bells and whistles and a fundamental difference between the way they intend to manage dotfiles and the way stow does. Makes it difficult to get started.
One thing that helped me when I was first getting into it: Chezmoi doesn't like compartmentalization like stow. It supports it, but it want's you to lean into the config langue a bit before you start doing that.
If you do that you can get away with only touching the add, cd, and update commands.
Exactly... but it still adds some overhead, which I'm honestly not a huge fan of.
At the end of the day, I want a single directory, where I can symlink the files and folders into their appropriate places, and share them across multiple machines, all that, without digging too deep into the tool, especially when I frequently update things, like a neovim config, etc..
And stow, paired with git, does exactly what I need. I only made some "aliases" to simplify the workflow.
I'm all in favor of tools that automate dotfiles and make system configuration simpler for folks just getting started, but what benefit is there over using bash scripts
(appologies for no rtfm. Conversation is more fun anyway 🙂)
Exactly. For now, it's main focus is to only move configs to the dotsdir (since stow throws a conflict when there's already something in place), let stow create the symlink and push it to git.
on a remote mashine, however, you still need to handle conflicts yourself. but it's also mostly intended for fresh installations, or where you don't mind just rm -rf the existing config
As a heads up, your readme has "machine" misspelled as "maschine" in two spots:
- On your current maschine
- On another maschine
Looks like thats the german spelling?
Fattiga använder amfetamin och tramadol medan rika människor använder kokain. Det är ett av resultaten som kan utläsas ur Stockholms mätning av droger i avloppsvattnet 2024. Användningen av kokain ökar dessutom markant över helgerna.
Not sure if that's what you mean by heavy but I recently watched 1984 and while the movie is good I found it kind of hard to watch. Possibly because a lot of the story and background information was only indirectly said or hinted at and you had to actually pay attention and think about what you saw.
I guess I'm just used to modern cinema where everything is very in your face
Polsk vapenhandlare försåg svenska gäng med vapen. I en framgångsrik polisinsats samordnad av Europol och ledd av brottsbekämpande myndigheter från Polen greps en polsk vapenhandlare i slutet av november. Han har levererat vapen till brottslingar i hela Europa.
Reacher Season 3 - Official Teaser | Prime Video
- YouTube
Auf YouTube findest du die angesagtesten Videos und Tracks. Außerdem kannst du eigene Inhalte hochladen und mit Freunden oder gleich der ganzen Welt teilen.youtube.com
Reacher Season 3 - Official Teaser | Prime Video
- YouTube
Auf YouTube findest du die angesagtesten Videos und Tracks. Außerdem kannst du eigene Inhalte hochladen und mit Freunden oder gleich der ganzen Welt teilen.youtube.com
Moderators Across Social Media Struggle to Contain Celebrations of UnitedHealthcare CEO’s Assassination
Moderators Across Social Media Struggle to Contain Celebrations of UnitedHealthcare CEO’s Assassination
While Reddit mods and admin try to keep up with the site's "no violence" terms of use, Facebook and LinkedIn is reacting with tens of thousands of laughing emojis.Samantha Cole (404 Media)
Biden Makes His Own Attack on Nonprofit Over Palestine
Biden Makes His Own Attack on Nonprofit Over Palestine
The Biden administration is withholding funds from the Climate Justice Alliance, a federal grantee that has spoken out about Palestine.Akela Lacy (The Intercept)
My bad I saw the ones from hexbear and world (and I don't think world would like to discuss this so hexbear would likely be the c/politics).
Smh it still feels odd to me to see discussion posts in a news community - at least for a specific topic (if it was a general discussion abt the Syrian civil war it wouldn't bother me that much tbh)
But I understand why you shared it here a bit more now on the other hand. \^\^
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One time, we were drawing a state diagram of how the core loop in our application should behave. So, you know, first you have the preparation state, then when that succeeds, you go to the getting-things-ready state, then into the actual doing-things state, then the result-reporting state and so on. So, there was exactly one happy path.
Then we figured, we should also diagram all the error scenarios. If an error occurs in the preparation state, we should transition to the result-reporting state. But if an error occurs in the getting-things-ready state, we'll need to go to an intermediate cleanup state before we go to the result-reporting state, and so on.
As we added more and more error paths, the arrows had to curve more and more, until the whole diagram eventually looked like an onion. That's when I knew, we were doing real software engineering. 🙃
I mean, yeah, I wrote it kind of humorously up there, but I do actually think state diagrams are a good idea and modelling the known error paths is part of real software engineering.
However, I've never been in a project where anyone knew nearly enough about what we're supposed to build, to be able to draw a state diagram before we got started. We would rather do a refactoring halfway through and then we would design a state machine to fit the requirements...
You know, not everybody likes onions.
Cakes! Everybody likes cakes! Cakes have layers.
Why can't software be like cakes?
RSS pleasantly surprised me
I've gotten to a point in my privacy journey where it's less about moving towards private options, and more about relaxing and having some fun with what I can do.
I put off messing around with RSS for a while. I simply didn't have a significant need for it. However, after finding no good options to monitor various Lemmy communities without logging in, I decided to try out an RSS reader.
I settled on Feeder as my RSS reader, despite a few missing features I would like. I added my first Lemmy community as a feed, to try it out. I was immediately surprised how well it worked.
I also added other feeds, such as Tails News, and I was happy with that. I could monitor all the communities I needed to.
Then, I noticed one day, there was an RSS button for my Lemmy inbox. This is where I was really pleased: I can view my notifications without the need to log in, all in the same place.
Lemmy and RSS are both incredible, and I truly believe RSS is the hidden backbone of the internet. I love it, and maybe you should give it a try too!
(Ahem P.S. if anyone has an RSS reader as good as Feeder for Android that fixes this issue, please let me know)
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It's cool.
I currently catch up on news with it.
Firefox has RSS radar extensions that can help find rss feeds in websites(that don't really show/mention it on every page)
Security concerns? Or no one maintaining it?
One day Mozilla will remove the web browser component of Firefox and go for AI, social media and "most used news" (pre-approved) API interaction only. 😏
"Because that's what the users want".
/rss.xml or /feed/ or something manually to the link does work at times. The inconsistency is also a problem. But some blogs just do not have such a functionality at all, or is not tested (wrong dates, therefore unusable). Its ~~often~~ sometimes an afterthought and inconsistent.
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I personally hate newsletters because
1) my email inbox is already cluttered enough as it is
2) I need to share my email to subscribe, which puts the balance of power into the hands of the sender at the expense of my privacy
I'd rather have newsletters made available through RSS feeds, where I can subscribe and unsubscribe anonymously.
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You can turn newsletters into RSS feeds anonymously through Kill the Newsletter.
I've been using it for over a year and it works flawlessly. Highly recommend!
I second that excitement! When I first found RSS, it felt like rediscovering the original intent of the internet. It gives you full flexibility of your sources of information all in one place, without giving your data away to a corporate entity, or signing up for any platform for that matter.
Tbh it is such a breath of fresh air compared to the feeds and platforms we've become accustomed to--and RSS has been around longer than them, which is crazy to me.
I just hope websites on the internet continue to support it--as many older, not as common technologies often get phased out.
The Old Reader supports 100 feeds on the free tier. And they have a nice list of apps that support syncing to your account:
Might work for you if you don’t syndicate many feeds.
I've been happily using RSS feeds for many years. I mostly use them for webcomics. I've got a bunch of different webcomic feeds. But I also use RSS to follow a bunch of low-traffic sites that I care about the content of but don't want to have to manually visit just to see if there's an update.
Also, I don't have a google account, but I use RSS to follow a couple of youTube channels that I find interesting. (Again, stuff that rarely updates. eg. hbomberguy.)
I love RSS.
I run FreshRSS as my server via docker and connect to it via Read You on Android and NewsFlash on Linux
I also run RSS-Bridge in docker. It has been really useful as it can generate RSS feeds for many websites that don't natively have them.
To this day I can't fully understand why they did it.
One word: ads.
With RSS, you have content from various sources in one place, stripped of the ads, without any cookielicious tracking. How are you supposed to monitize that?
I'm annoyed that a lot of the sites I browse don't have RSS feeds, and I've had to do some really tiresome hacks just to get some to work (for example, even tools like FreshRSS's HTML parser doesn't tell you the reason a feed broke, so there's a dozen different things to adjust blindly until it works).
RSS saves me so much time, I used to waste hours just cycling through pages to see if any updated.
But do not friendica allow you to join community by Activity pub? (Benefit is you can reply directly from there)
@checksout @Open Source
This is cool . thanks for the tip. I now have my #lemmy, #Mastodon and #Friendica feed almost in one with #Fedilab . I just need to sort out my #privacysettings (and remember to get off the #Madridmetro at #nuevosministerios
It's audio-specific but I use Audiobookshelf's RSS feed
I have a local folder where I put downloaded youtube audio and the RSS feed updates automatically when new files are placed there. Then, I access it through Lissen or the official audiobookshelf app.
RSS is great and Google tried to kill it so you'd have to use other services.
I like how I can tell a big event has happened because I see a bunch of articles on it, and that it's possible to catch up to where you last were in the feed.
That means you've caught up on the news, no need to red any more, you can do something else. Algorithms always serve you up new content, so you're in this constant state of thinking something is always happening.
I think RSS readers would help fix the brains of a lot of boomers if we could ever get them off Facebook
I recently started self hosting this one github.com/Athou/commafeed
I don't know if it's the best or anything, but it works fine for me.
I see another commenter mentioned FreshRSS. While abandoned now, I created github.com/Fmstrat/agriget a long time ago when Feedly shut down. It was based on TT-RSS which I do not recommend because of drama with the creator (they are very.. bad to contributors (I stupidly ignored that originally). Not to mention, it's dated now.
All this to say, my recco is to self host with an agregator that saves the content locally. That way, if the article ever goes away, or your phone dies, you always have your saved and read content.
I host my own Lemmy instance, and have been considering making an API not that turns RSS feeds into communities, as the one thing I like about Lemmy is the conversations. So that would give me the best of both worlds.
RIP Aaron Swartz. You are truely missed...
...Is it just me or does the shooter have the same smile? I've heard he's really smart.
Install an RSS reader and add the feeds from sites you want to follow.
Most people like feeder: f-droid.org/packages/com.nonon…
I've used 'KillTheNewsletter' a lot. And then it hit me. Most email clients have features I want for my feeds (filtering, auto-sorting into folders by keywords, etc.)
So far, only emacs (forgot extension name) and feedbro (firefox extension) have similar festures to these...
Hence, I'm yet to try it, but might create an account only for feeds. And then use rss2email (pypi)
Is anyone else using this tool? I'd love to hear it...
I like RSS, i think it can improve the information diet people have by getting high quality content. kinda an alternative to more popular content (meaning possibly low effort) pushed to us using algorithms or just created to appeal to the masses because it is more economical.
It does have a UX problem, i think we need some open source project where you click on a button and it will show you the RSS address but also give you the option to set up RSS while it coaches you to do it in a way that is kinda pleasant and easy.
[rofi] I wrote a little rofi launcher to hot-switch xrandr configs
cross-posted from: lemmy.sdf.org/post/26139713
My laptop is my workstation, and find myself fairly regularly having to switch between display layouts.
I wrote this script to work in conjunction with
arandrgenerated xrandr layouts that are slightly, manually modified to also usexwallpaperto set per-layout wallpapers.Also included is a systemd service that loads the previously chosen config at startup.
There's a little more info in the root README, as well as the most recent commit, for a deeper dive.
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Walmart CEO Says Grocery Prices Will Continue To Rise in 2025 Despite Wishes for Customer Relief
Walmart CEO Says Grocery Prices Will Continue To Rise in 2025 Despite Wishes for Customer Relief - RetailWire
Walmart CEO Doug McMillon says consumers should expect higher prices in 2025.Lucille Barilla (RetailWire)
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Nightwatch Admin
in reply to comfy • • •Mothra
in reply to Nightwatch Admin • • •HenriVolney
in reply to Mothra • • •Smoogs
in reply to Nightwatch Admin • • •Not necessarily.
There can be knock off versions of many expensive looking things.
Nightwatch Admin
in reply to Smoogs • • •PunnyName
in reply to Nightwatch Admin • • •bountygiver [any]
in reply to Smoogs • • •disguy_ovahea
in reply to comfy • • •The gun turned out to be a recreated WWII pistol with suppressor that is famed for its silence. It’s also the most common pistol used by veterinarians nationwide.
Someone did their homework.
newsweek.com/what-we-know-abou…
Edit: This thing sounds like an airsoft pistol
youtu.be/n8XHxUlg0F8
EldritchFemininity
in reply to disguy_ovahea • • •That article disagrees with the second part of your comment. It says that the Welrod replicas are rare and mostly used by veterinarians, and looking them up, they've only been available for import to the US since 2021.
I don't know where you got your 300 million figure from. Wikipedia puts the total number of civilian firearms in the US at about 393 million, and that includes shotguns, hunting rifles, etc. The most popular pistol in the world I think is the 1911, and I imagine that holds true for veterans as well, and there have been about 4.3 million produced in the past 110 years. The most produced handgun is the Glock, estimated between 10 to 20 million guns.
It's also not confirmed that that was the pistol he used, just suspected. I saw people talking about how you'd potentially have to manually cycle a regular semi-auto pistol like he did if you were using a suppressor and subsonic rounds because they wouldn't produce enough force to cycle the gun on their own.
Edit: You fixed your comment while I was writing this, but I'm gonna leave it unedited for the info.
disguy_ovahea
in reply to EldritchFemininity • • •EldritchFemininity
in reply to disguy_ovahea • • •Captain Aggravated
in reply to disguy_ovahea • • •pyre
in reply to disguy_ovahea • • •PunnyName
in reply to comfy • • •comfy
in reply to PunnyName • • •PunnyName
in reply to comfy • • •Ever considered it might lead people to the wrong person? You know, how people do that shit all the fucking time?
And fuck it, just let him fade into obscurity. Cold cases are solve years later because it stayed in the minds of others.
Forget.
About.
Him.
comfy
in reply to PunnyName • • •Not sure who these 'people' are, or how the given image could possibly do that, but considering that obstruction of this investigation is cool and productive I fail to see the problem.
hahaha
NO.
They are a hero. They deserve celebration, commemoration and to hold a clear place in the minds of citizens, like the myth of Robin Hood once did. Remember him.
PunnyName
in reply to comfy • • •pyre
in reply to PunnyName • • •