This is just one of the comments on the Revolt E2EE issue, I guess the author felt so proud of their opinion to make it into a blog post, I wouldn’t say anything if they at least revisited the whole discussion and tried to make a reasonable summary.
The argument provided in the article against features is simply “too hard to develop, too hard to maintain, nobody cares enough”.
If nobody cared, nobody would go on Matrix, if everything that was hard to develop were just dropped before even trying, we would have stopped at the hello world (not implying I’m not a lazy developer, but I surely don’t want to imply that there aren’t brilliant people out there who can undertake scarily big tasks).
Giving another feature as a sort of replacement: federated identities, is not a replacement at all, it’s a completely different scope. I just can’t empathise with the point that they try to make
Why is Denny DeVito a free software advocate now?
Roll the credits boys 👏👏
when during job interview the recruiter ask if you code on the weekend
I think it’s more to see if you’re actually passionate about what you do and you don’t “just” do it for work, which definitely is a bit of a twisted view, when on average you’ll already be spending 40 hours a week doing that, but I think people tend to make this sort of evaluation, because people who love programming so much to also do it on their free time will usually be better, since they simply have more experience than those who only do what they’re assigned to do
They kinda did in the README, though that’s not really how you comply with the license
What were they?
all software is shit
Based
I rudely agree with your opinion
Have you checked if there is any record of your Bluetooth card on the Linux hardware database?
That might give you an indication of how well it’s supported
Never done anything with 2 mics, so I’ll just throw a vague suggestion: there’s Helvum to combine the mic inputs and then Easy Effects that can apply a few noise suppression filters that can do world of a difference, maybe the first isn’t even necessary, while the second is the core and can be tweaked a lot
cat
propaganda
Let the Zucc feel the heat
I’m guessing you’re currently on Windows, right? If so, Virtualbox is perfectly fine, otherwise, if you’re on Linux already, you could use Boxes or Virt manager that are more performant, but don’t stress yourself if you just wanna play around Virtualbox will always be more than sufficient.
As for the ISOs you can just get them directly from the distro websites or, if using Boxes, you can choose one at VM creation and it’ll download it for you
Damn these programmers horny af
I see, I think it’s clear enough now. Never noticed if that happened to me too, but yes, since you got that consistently, it definitely deserves to be discussed
When I install anything through wine/proton, the apps on the screen lose their focus
With “the apps” here you mean the Linux apps, right?
When I bring up an app into focus from the panel, it shows behind whatever app that is already on the screen.
Also here I’m confused if you’re referring to Linux or Windows apps.
Beside that, for potential bug reports like this, I think you’ll get more/better responses over at the KDE forum as stated in the page about bug reporting https://community.kde.org/Get_Involved/Issue_Reporting
DisplayPort connector stuck in socket I think
100% agreed, use the right tool for the right job, that’s what the author doesn’t get