Seems like using a copyleft on the reference implementation of a new protocol is a great way to ensure the protocol is never widely adopted.
Seems like using a copyleft on the reference implementation of a new protocol is a great way to ensure the protocol is never widely adopted.
I regret that I have but one upvote to give.
“Just switch to mayo!”
In that case I guess I’m very close to running Linux again.
I just want proper HDR support in games. Since that’s most of what I use my laptop for these days, Windows it is.
What other programming techniques should be opt-in by default? OOP? Global variables? Caching?
Singling out a technique just because you disapprove of how certain parties have used it is just as ridiculous as trying to to shoehorn it into every application and use it as a marketing buzzword.
Statistical analysis of a large data set is a sin, after all.
Asking “who still uses $thing”, where $thing is the most popular thing in its category, is peak Lemmy.
Surely it should be “cleaned the bin”, right? Dialect issues complicate things but the basic problem seems to be that the joke is just ungrammatical.
It’s absolutely trivial to convert either format to json if necessary. The real killer for me with json is the lack of comments. Human-maintained files absolutely need comments.
Json is a garbage format for anything that’s meant to ever be touched by a human. At least use yaml or json5.
Can I run games in HDR, though?
At least in the US, the reason 3G isn’t available is that it has been phased out, as has 2G. You may as well complain about how slow it is to send data with smoke signals, because 4G is table stakes for an internet-capable device now.
I’m all for ending homelessness, but that’s really a different problem than we were discussing. I’m pretty confident jQuery isn’t stopping anyone from being housed.
Anyway, there’s no way you’re gonna convince me 32 kB is a lot of data. It’s just not. Even the slowest 3G connections can download that much in half a second. Just the text of this thread is probably more than 32 kB. If you can’t download that much data, you only technically have Internet service at all.
If it was for surveillance, do you really think they’d tell you about it?
At a certain point it makes more sense to subsidize better low-end hardware than to make every web site usable on a 20 year old flip phone. I’d argue that if saving 32 kB is considered a big win, you’re well past that point. Get that homeless guy a £50 phone and quit wasting the time of a bunch of engineers who make more than that in an hour.
If the software is much more expensive to develop, most is it just won’t exist at all. You can get the same effect by just not using software you feel is bloated.
Why are you still using Windows? Switch to Linux!