تعلم إدارة الحاويات في دوكر.
#دوكر #Docker #docker_desktop #Programming #ProgrammingTip #programminglife #Technology #TechNews #Tech #DevOps #courses
youtu.be/ekZwjmF3ZXw?si=uSAtWn…
Happy Reading Thursday 📚
Another beautiful week, another issue on the Storyteller's Byte Tales newsletter.
This issue shares debugging techniques and tools in Django as well as an interesting feature on Django 5.0.
Its also exciting to see Python as the highest ranked on Github.
Enjoy!
open.substack.com/pub/veldakia…
#Python #Django #Programming #TechNewsletter #SoftwareDevelopment
Y sin derretirse el cerebro ni nada.
RFC 9680: Antitrust Guidelines for IETF Participants
Ce court #RFC administratif explique aux participant·es #IETF ce que sont les lois #antitrust et comment éviter de les violer.
Et puisqu'on parle de trust : youtube.com/watch?v=WfD8Dnh2xh…
Trying a simple abd lazy compost solution..
Had a 1m pipe I was planning to use for hydroponics that I gave up and decided to try a lazy man's compost solution.
Made a lot of holes in the first 20cm of it and pushed it into a pot I used to have a tomato plant in. Placed some mints around it and put a small pot on top to work as the cover.
Whenever I have some #vegetables left over, I put them in the pipe and I'm expecting to have good compost in it by the summer as the worms in the pot can go in an out of the holes, eating the vegetable and turn it to fertilizer.
At the same time, I am going to have unlimited minteto have for tea or salad.
I may cover and paint the pipe, or emayeb cover ot with some wood I saved from orange boxes.
#Gardening #BalconyGarden #ContainerGarden #SouthOfFrance #Hydroponics #GrowYourOwn #Plants #France #GrowOwnFood #Mint #Composting
debo likes this.
A Hurrying Cat | Спешащая кошка
straycatsobserver.ru/cats/2024…
#tabbycat #fedicats #autumncat #fallcat #catsofpixelfed #猫 #ねこ #cat #кошка #кот #catinthesun #pixelfedcats
MOURIR SANS ENRICHIR LES VAUTOURS
lepostillon.org/Mourir-sans-en…
Super excited about this. Hardware support of the laptop seems all good. Now I need to figure out how to connect to the proprietary VPN and local office WiFi (Ethernet and password-protected WiFi for visitors work fine)
reshared this
Brodie Robertson
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •Kevin Lyda
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •Brodie Robertson
in reply to Kevin Lyda • • •waffles :gentoo:
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •Brodie Robertson
in reply to waffles :gentoo: • • •Yuki Linux
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •what I am waiting for is the specific one that runs just basic Wayland and runs their entire operating system inside of X Wayland.
I feel it would be interesting to see from an actual company? 
BasiqueEvangelist
in reply to Yuki Linux • • •Brodie Robertson
in reply to BasiqueEvangelist • • •Joshua Strobl :verified:
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •Unless there is a need for internal Wayland protocols that would outright prohibit use of another compositor, being able to run a desktop shell on top of any arbitrary compositor is a win, and a sign we are moving in the right direction with Wayland protocol standardization.
In my opinion, desktop environments should not be built with the intent of being monolithic where everything is tightly coupled. A composable desktop approach should really be the end goal for most of them. If a desktop environment isn't opting to shift to that model, then they are in many ways taking ownership of a much larger stack than frankly is necessary, when they could instead be working alongside other projects to build out generalized solutions or ones which can be used as a foundation (with a minimal layer on top of it to facilitate the catered needs of that given environment). See: KDE Frameworks (not just used with KDE / Plasma), wlroots, Mir & Miraway, etc.
Brodie Robertson
in reply to Joshua Strobl :verified: • • •@me I absolutely think it's a win, but it's a win that coming out of necessity for a lot of projects. There are some fun talks from Ubuntu Summit 2024, in the COSMIC one Victoria was swapping out cosmic-comp with others like sway, and niri and in the Miriway talk the main demo was around LXQt.
I'm really happy that we're seeing this composability actually coming into the Wayland world, it's one of the concerns that I often hear repeated
Brodie Robertson
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •Joshua Strobl :verified:
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •"it's a win that coming out of necessity for a lot of projects" If a project views it as a "necessity" rather than an opportunity, then I think that project's perception is likely still stuck in the era of monolithic rather than composable. I wouldn't blame most, of course, as that was in many ways the case for X11 and most desktops (including Budgie under X11, to be fair) either rely on an upstream WM or a fork of it and have in some ways taken ownership over that part of the stack.
The opportunity is there for us to see more unique desktop shells or experiences that intermix components and compositors, opening the door to more catered user experiences.
As an example, during the porting effort for Budgie Desktop over to Wayland, the first compositor I ran it under (back in May) was kwin! Not everything worked since it doesn't support some wlr protocols, but it was pretty damn close. Ever since then, I've been using labwc as the compositor since it provides a good wlroots-based experience until our "magpie" is daily driveable. In theory, I could run it with Miriway as
... show more"it's a win that coming out of necessity for a lot of projects" If a project views it as a "necessity" rather than an opportunity, then I think that project's perception is likely still stuck in the era of monolithic rather than composable. I wouldn't blame most, of course, as that was in many ways the case for X11 and most desktops (including Budgie under X11, to be fair) either rely on an upstream WM or a fork of it and have in some ways taken ownership over that part of the stack.
The opportunity is there for us to see more unique desktop shells or experiences that intermix components and compositors, opening the door to more catered user experiences.
As an example, during the porting effort for Budgie Desktop over to Wayland, the first compositor I ran it under (back in May) was kwin! Not everything worked since it doesn't support some wlr protocols, but it was pretty damn close. Ever since then, I've been using labwc as the compositor since it provides a good wlroots-based experience until our "magpie" is daily driveable. In theory, I could run it with Miriway as well, and in fact @Conan_Kudo and I have discussed this in our Budgie stand-ups more than a few times :)
I think that's all some really cool shit and a great opportunity. It requires very little engineering work on our part, it is just a matter of the compositor and componentry speaking the same language.
Brodie Robertson
in reply to Joshua Strobl :verified: • • •El Draculo
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •Brodie Robertson
in reply to El Draculo • • •Toran Shaw - M7TOR
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •Brodie Robertson
in reply to Toran Shaw - M7TOR • • •Toran Shaw - M7TOR
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •Brodie Robertson
in reply to Toran Shaw - M7TOR • • •Toran Shaw - M7TOR
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •Henri
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •Askier
in reply to Brodie Robertson • • •