Whole-known-network
<p>Italians, you don't need to make up stories about Cardinal Tagle just because you don't like our Jollibee sweet spaghetti.</p>
<p>I’m sorry, but Facebook did more harm to humankind than all NSO-alike spyware vendors of the world altogether. You are fighting into the wrong direction</p>
<p><span class="h-card" translate="no"><a href="https://wandering.shop/@xgranade" class="u-url mention">@<span>xgranade</span></a></span> interestingly, highly disciplined languages like Rust actually benefit this part of the "ecosystem" because the high-quality feedback from the compiler can be used to refine the result (where otherwise you'd have a much harder time making something that doesn't segfault)</p>
<p>My phrase of the day:</p><p>"aesthetic aversion to cloud-centric and energy-intensive tooling"</p><p>(source: <a href="https://lobste.rs/s/ueacfz/zed_editor_adds_full_ai_capabilities#c_hm6psu" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener" translate="no"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">lobste.rs/s/ueacfz/zed_editor_</span><span class="invisible">adds_full_ai_capabilities#c_hm6psu</span></a>)</p>
<p><a href="https://toot.aquilenet.fr/tags/YunoHost" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>YunoHost</span></a>: taking care of the ones that would be intimidated by self-hosting</p><p>:yunohost: We've just released the new YunoHost documentation engine to make it easier to get started with the solution: <a href="https://doc.yunohost.org/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" translate="no"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="">doc.yunohost.org/</span><span class="invisible"></span></a></p><p>:neopossum_laptop: To this end, we're planning to dedicate some time to update and clarify the documentation. Your support is invaluable in animating this process: <a href="https://yunohost.org/donate.html" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" translate="no"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="">yunohost.org/donate.html</span><span class="invisible"></span></a></p><p><a href="https://toot.aquilenet.fr/tags/YNH" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>YNH</span></a> <a href="https://toot.aquilenet.fr/tags/documentation" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>documentation</span></a> <a href="https://toot.aquilenet.fr/tags/gratitude" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>gratitude</span></a></p>
<p>The whole thing flies in the face of the kind of engineering discipline that leads to formal specifications, IDLs and APIs, reproducible builds, linters and fuzzers and memory-safe languages.</p><p>To throw that all out in favor of sparkling `cat /dev/urandom | sh` just breaks my brain. Why do people think that's an OK way to make software?</p>
<p>(And yes, I've used `curl | sh` and even mentioned it positively in my gemlog yesterday. It's bad, but on some occasions the best of a bunch of bad options. That's not the case here, though.)</p>
<p>I just cannot put myself in the headspace of a programmer who hits a button that pipes word mcnuggets directly into the terminal and runs them.</p><p>We've known that `curl | sh` is bad for a long time, how does that get better if the thing you curl is a badly designed RNG?</p>
<p>*80% of Filipinos are Catholics<br />*People get nailed on the cross<br />*Longest Christmas season in the world <br />*No divorce </p><p>You want the Pope to be like Jesus who walked with the poor? Tagle is from a third world country and a school of Jesuits. </p><p>Talk about "Catholic traditions".</p>