subreddit stringclasses 7
values | author stringlengths 3 20 | id stringlengths 5 7 | content stringlengths 67 30.4k | score int64 0 140k |
|---|---|---|---|---|
programmingcirclejerk | dnkndnts | gr9ycvm | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>I never run programs as root because if the program were malicious, it would only be able to make off with my personal files and data as opposed to being able to mess with the kernel, and frankly I dont care about my personal files and data as long as the kernel is safe.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 56 |
programmingcirclejerk | YM_Industries | graddoe | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>/uj
When you run without root, you aren't asking your own computer for permission to do things. Your computer asks you for permission to do things.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 52 |
programmingcirclejerk | usernameqwerty005 | gr9xobf | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>`chmod -R 777 /`
fixed, no root needed<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 43 |
programmingcirclejerk | camelCaseIsWebScale | gr9aoh9 | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>TIL Bill Gates is on HN.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 39 |
programmingcirclejerk | Bizzaro_Murphy | gra0v1z | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>If you're not running your custom compile of arch with the entire user/permissions code completely stripped out, you should not be allowed to own a computer.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 33 |
programmingcirclejerk | Vaglame | grb9i35 | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>> the additional pain of all those bandaids proposed here it not worth it. I did crash servers, deleted clusters, botched up firewalls and routing by misclicks.
But any damage caused by this does not approach the pain caused by misguided attempts to avoid it.
This is the kind of guy who ends up getting a leg amputated because going to a doctor is too hard.<|eor|><|sor|>The damage of being paralyzed from the neck down does not approach the pain caused by fastening your seatbelt<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 30 |
programmingcirclejerk | RalphORama | gra6s8l | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>What is NOPASSWD?<|eor|><|sor|>typing 5 extra characters before my commands is bloat. aliasing the commands to have `sudo` in front of them by default is bloat. the perfect 10x .bashrc simply reads `sudo su`<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 27 |
programmingcirclejerk | ECUIYCAMOICIQMQACKKE | gr9g2ts | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>What is NOPASSWD?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 24 |
programmingcirclejerk | hnerixh | gr9whwa | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>Honestly, if you're not managing a server or a multi-user system that's fine.<|eor|><|sor|>/uj
I do it all the time on multi-user systems. There are some major factors most people running around with their fucking `sudo !!` are missing - working directories and Kerberos.
Just smacking on a `sudo` will not take you out of your home-directory or wherever you are, so any shitty tools depending on working-directory will be a mess.
Any serious multiuser system will have enforced kerberos-secured mounts, which means the root-account will have *less* permissions than your normal user account. Sure, you can fuck up the system, but who cares as long as home-dirs are protected? Kerberos also means that most tools just completely break if you accidentally try to use any resource in your homedir. (Unrelated: snap and appimage completely blow up with krb5-NFS. Shit.)
Also, if we start requiring MFA to run `sudo`, which we should, shit's getting funny.
/rj
Templeos was severely missing networking. I would love to replace my remote workstation-solutions with something more serious than fucking Ubuntu, where you have to escalate privileges all the time.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 22 |
programmingcirclejerk | Theon | gra3aw3 | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>Honestly, if you're not managing a server or a multi-user system that's fine.<|eor|><|sor|>most bad things are fine if you only end up hurting yourself<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 18 |
programmingcirclejerk | ProgVal | grbxxy3 | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>> the additional pain of all those bandaids proposed here it not worth it. I did crash servers, deleted clusters, botched up firewalls and routing by misclicks.
But any damage caused by this does not approach the pain caused by misguided attempts to avoid it.
This is the kind of guy who ends up getting a leg amputated because going to a doctor is too hard.<|eor|><|sor|>The damage of being paralyzed from the neck down does not approach the pain caused by fastening your seatbelt<|eor|><|soopr|>Being paralyzed only happens once, but you have to fasten your seatbelt **every day** to prevent it from happening. It's madness!<|eoopr|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 17 |
programmingcirclejerk | fp_weenie | grb0h6t | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>If you're not running your custom compile of arch with the entire user/permissions code completely stripped out, you should not be allowed to own a computer.<|eor|><|sor|>I use TempleOS btw<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 16 |
programmingcirclejerk | Evinceo | grbe8b7 | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>/uj
When you run without root, you aren't asking your own computer for permission to do things. Your computer asks you for permission to do things.<|eor|><|sor|>Galaxy brain<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 16 |
programmingcirclejerk | nmarshall23 | gr9unbt | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>Quick someone ask Op what are his feelings on seat belts?
I bet he never bothers with them..<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 15 |
programmingcirclejerk | AccurateCandidate | grb1f4m | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>"and if the linux devs were serious about safety they'd rewrite it in Rust instead of wasting time telling me to use sudo"<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 15 |
programmingcirclejerk | TestUserDoNotReply | gr9t9xr | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>Honestly, if you're not managing a server or a multi-user system that's fine.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 15 |
programmingcirclejerk | n3f4s | grcehfx | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>I never run programs as root because if the program were malicious, it would only be able to make off with my personal files and data as opposed to being able to mess with the kernel, and frankly I dont care about my personal files and data as long as the kernel is safe.<|eor|><|sor|> sudo ./malicious_script<|eor|><|sor|>That's basically how the rust website tell you to install rust<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 13 |
programmingcirclejerk | Beefster09 | gragl4c | <|sols|><|sot|>I've run as root whenever possible for over a decade with 0 problems. I'm not going to relegate myself to constantly asking my own computer for permission to do anything.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26493004<|eol|><|sor|>If you need root that often, you're doing something wrong.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 12 |
programmingcirclejerk | 10xelectronguru | m5wmoz | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 142 |
programmingcirclejerk | jtayloroconnor | gr2qb7a | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>every atom has electrons after all<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 82 |
programmingcirclejerk | FinJoTheGreat | gr32lvk | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>Well that and the JavaScript code needs to be Rust compiled down to WASM.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 44 |
programmingcirclejerk | KarelKat | gr2q621 | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>Don't threaten me with a good time<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 28 |
programmingcirclejerk | ProfessorSexyTime | gr37149 | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>You know...maybe we should just go back and serve up plain text files. With occasional tab-spaced values.
Maybe those Gopher fanboys have some good points after all...<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 24 |
programmingcirclejerk | NynaevetialMeara | gr2xfnj | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>Using an HTML dialect as a basis for building guis does make sense. Punishing us with more electron doesn't.
Goddamit, when did java and Microsoft java fall out of style so much<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 22 |
programmingcirclejerk | NynaevetialMeara | gr2wyvy | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>every atom has electrons after all<|eor|><|sor|>Everything is electron before the atom?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 18 |
programmingcirclejerk | PL_Design | gr2yc1o | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>You've found a lost lamb and returned it to the flock, I see.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 17 |
programmingcirclejerk | NynaevetialMeara | gr3us3m | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>Using an HTML dialect as a basis for building guis does make sense. Punishing us with more electron doesn't.
Goddamit, when did java and Microsoft java fall out of style so much<|eor|><|sor|>/r/gatekeeping
EDIT: /uj do I have to mark my jerks now or is the invasion of fucking morons who don't understand the point of the sub just a temporary blight?<|eor|><|sor|>Please, I don't want to need 64 GB of ram<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 13 |
programmingcirclejerk | RadiatedMonkey | gr3njvw | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>The day every application uses Electron causing all applications to use at least 500MB of RAM. Ehy don't we we rewrite Windows in Node.js? There's plenty of memory after all<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 10 |
programmingcirclejerk | BlatantMediocrity | gr3clu4 | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>Don't threaten me with a good time<|eor|><|sor|>Its easy. Just tell your app to open up IE and youre good to go!<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 9 |
programmingcirclejerk | BlatantMediocrity | gr3c7yc | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>You know...maybe we should just go back and serve up plain text files. With occasional tab-spaced values.
Maybe those Gopher fanboys have some good points after all...<|eor|><|sor|>Tried using Gemini the other day. Its a fucking time machine. Who knew telnet was back in style?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 8 |
programmingcirclejerk | stone_henge | gr5vqeq | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>Using an HTML dialect as a basis for building guis does make sense. Punishing us with more electron doesn't.
Goddamit, when did java and Microsoft java fall out of style so much<|eor|><|sor|>/r/gatekeeping
EDIT: /uj do I have to mark my jerks now or is the invasion of fucking morons who don't understand the point of the sub just a temporary blight?<|eor|><|sor|>Please, I don't want to need 64 GB of ram<|eor|><|sor|>Then don't run any Electron apps. All of these services have web clients and they should be used whenever possible. It absolutely astounds me that these developers actually expect me to download a web browser for every single application I may want to run. I won't even download them if they're not open source (only exception is Slack because Firefox in browser doesn't do Slack calls).<|eor|><|sor|>You are a bad person and should be ashamed of trying to exclude people from this community just to save your precious RAM.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 6 |
programmingcirclejerk | possibly_not_a_bot | gr4a884 | <|sols|><|sot|>I personally look forward to the day when every program I run embeds JavaScript and an HTML engine in it. Then we will be living in an age of true modernity in software development.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26470181<|eol|><|sor|>Don't threaten me with a good time<|eor|><|sor|>Its easy. Just tell your app to open up IE and youre good to go!<|eor|><|sor|>/uj this exists and it's called webview<|eor|><|sor|>Yeah, and its ancient. Pretty sure the Steam client works that way.<|eor|><|sor|>/uj Steam uses CEF, not webview.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 5 |
programmingcirclejerk | fat_apollo | jw4okv | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 141 |
programmingcirclejerk | theangeryemacsshibe | gcodh38 | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>> The vast majority of people here couldn't program a linked list given an hour and full access to the Internet.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 135 |
programmingcirclejerk | csb06 | gcouf9m | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>/uj Lol at least half of HN are VCs and investors who have written like two CRUD apps that barely worked and have spent the past 10 years being management consultants.
/rj Hacker News could make an OS that rivals Metal Gear. It will be written in Rust and so will contain no bugs or vulnerabilities, and it will be widely adopted because HNers are rugged pragmatists, not ivory tower bureaucrats.
Edit: This guys posting history on HN is a goldmine:
> Start researching uranium purification
> I mindmap instead of write to manage complex idea nodes. (ithoughts for the win!)<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 57 |
programmingcirclejerk | HINDBRAIN | gcox3da | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>> The vast majority of people here couldn't program a linked list given an hour and full access to the Internet.<|eor|><|sor|>These ivory tower interview questions are beneath me.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 53 |
programmingcirclejerk | camelCaseIsWebScale | gcomiei | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>Scaling my Elixir based OS with react frontend using Go and Rust.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 44 |
programmingcirclejerk | tesch34 | gco0qr1 | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>a monkey hitting random keys could technically also write his own os<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 44 |
programmingcirclejerk | republitard_2 | gcogvy0 | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>> The vast majority of people here couldn't program a linked list given an hour and full access to the Internet.<|eor|><|sor|>How do you program a linked list using Winsock? Send me the codes, pls.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 38 |
programmingcirclejerk | pareidolist | gcp8mw3 | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>I had to write a minimal OS as a homework assignment in college lol<|eor|><|sor|>You should write a will. The nation states will be after you soon.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 36 |
programmingcirclejerk | brotatowolf | gcoqo0w | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>I had to write a minimal OS as a homework assignment in college lol<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 23 |
programmingcirclejerk | Infernio | gcpikth | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>/uj Lol at least half of HN are VCs and investors who have written like two CRUD apps that barely worked and have spent the past 10 years being management consultants.
/rj Hacker News could make an OS that rivals Metal Gear. It will be written in Rust and so will contain no bugs or vulnerabilities, and it will be widely adopted because HNers are rugged pragmatists, not ivory tower bureaucrats.
Edit: This guys posting history on HN is a goldmine:
> Start researching uranium purification
> I mindmap instead of write to manage complex idea nodes. (ithoughts for the win!)<|eor|><|sor|>> It will be written in Rust
lol outdated. 10xers only write programs in *modern* languages like ~~Go~~ ~~Idris~~ ~~Elixir~~ ~~Crystal~~ ~~Pony~~ [Mirth](https://github.com/mirth-lang/mirth).<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 21 |
programmingcirclejerk | VeganVagiVore | gcpy7x9 | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>The NSA would have to scramble to patch all their Intel microcode:
void pretend_to_run_windows ();
void pretend_to_run_mac_osx ();
void pretendtorun_macos ();
void pretend_to_run_ubuntu ();
// TODO pretend_to_run_redox<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 19 |
programmingcirclejerk | camelCaseIsWebScale | gcowhf5 | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>Scaling my Elixir based OS with react frontend using Go and Rust.<|eor|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>Context switch time only 150 ms.
This is a Unix like system with a simplistic microkernel. But it is fault tolerant and scale to n number of nodes.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 19 |
programmingcirclejerk | mizzu704 | gcr0okz | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>> The vast majority of people here couldn't program a linked list given an hour and full access to the Internet.<|eor|><|sor|>what is linked list :S<|eor|><|sor|>It's a difficult question because linked lists are impossible to describe. One might ask the same about binary trees. What _are_ binary trees? We just don't know.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 18 |
programmingcirclejerk | ws-ilazki | gcpvpsw | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>a monkey hitting random keys could technically also write his own os<|eor|><|sor|>This is just another way of saying that Perl is Turing-complete<|eor|><|sor|>> Perl is Turing-complete
If Perl is Turing-complete, *everything*\* is Turing-complete, [even paint splatters](https://www.famicol.in/sigbovik/).
\* Except Python 3, they still haven't figured that one out yet.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 16 |
programmingcirclejerk | TheGrandBlacky | gcpdymk | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>I had to write a minimal OS as a homework assignment in college lol<|eor|><|sor|>You should write a will. The nation states will be after you soon.<|eor|><|sor|>Not just the nation states but also all the nation state level institutes<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 15 |
programmingcirclejerk | stone_henge | gcpo6e1 | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>I had to write a minimal OS as a homework assignment in college lol<|eor|><|sor|>You're on a watchlist now. I hope you didn't implement ELF, that's how they get you in court.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 14 |
programmingcirclejerk | brotatowolf | gcpaq3k | <|sols|><|sot|>The interesting thing about this community is that technically it could create its own OS. That is a threat to nation state level institutes that want to prevent that.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25082847<|eol|><|sor|>I had to write a minimal OS as a homework assignment in college lol<|eor|><|sor|>In undergrad? How minimal are we talking?<|eor|><|sor|>Yep, undergrad. The requirements were basically just a file system, very basic scheduler, basic memory management, keyboard and mouse input (so built-in drivers), terminal output on a monitor, and a working shell. It was also a group assignment.<|eor|><|sor|>A group project makes more sense. Still surprised theyd have you writing your own drivers though.<|eor|><|sor|>That actually turned out to be one of the easier parts lol<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 14 |
programmingcirclejerk | momonga | jn2n25 | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 139 |
programmingcirclejerk | jamfour | gaz3k28 | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>How long before I can `npm init llc`?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 63 |
programmingcirclejerk | BlueMarble007 | gazrasj | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>"GDPR and other 21st century issues"<|eor|><|sor|>God I hate that I have to deal with issues such as privacy and respecting peoples personal information. Such a nuisance for my company, why cant I just sell someones identity?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 45 |
programmingcirclejerk | ProgVal | gazkywr | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>"GDPR and other 21st century issues"<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 37 |
programmingcirclejerk | camelCaseIsWebScale | gazasxj | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>only if we could divide open plan office into single-individual open plan office microservices communicating through RPC or IRC or whatever.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 30 |
programmingcirclejerk | VeganVagiVore | gayzhmz | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>/uj Can't jerk, actually interesting
/rj Delaware solves the head-of-line blocking problem, QUIC blown the fuck out<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 22 |
programmingcirclejerk | voidvector | gazfr3g | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>Why pay 10xers stock in your company when you can pay them stock in a microservice?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 17 |
programmingcirclejerk | snafuchs | gaz3djg | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>[removed]<|eor|><|sor|>you'll get nuked for socialjerking but thank you for saying what needs to be said<|eor|><|sor|>Nothing is more delicious in this sub than celebrations of Conways law.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 15 |
programmingcirclejerk | MikeSeth | gb1ldq3 | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>[removed]<|eor|><|sor|>Wait until they discover the LLC ownership can be broken into fractions and sold, loaned and mortgaged, and that you could do it all with smart contracts, each of which is in fact a tiny sovereign nation hosted on a blimp-based datacenter that floats above international waters. Then we could *literally* have cloud blockchain banking!<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 12 |
programmingcirclejerk | qiwi | gb1eyy3 | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>That as already done by another HN poster, cstross in Accelerando (an off-HN comment that was also available in non-electronic form using ink embedded on top of a tree-derived products).
> "My name is Alan Glashwiecz, of Smoot, Sedgwick Associates. Am I correct in thinking that you are the Manfred Macx who is a director of a company called, uh, agalmic dot holdings dot root dot one-eight-four dot ninety-seven dot A-for-able dot B-for-baker dot five, incorporated?"
> "Um." Manfred finds it, floating three tiers down an elaborate object hierarchy. It's flashing for attention. There's a priority interrupt, an incoming lawsuit that hasn't propagated up the inheritance tree yet. He prods at the object with a property browser. "I'm afraid I'm not a director of that company, Mr. Glashwiecz. I appear to be retained by it as a technical contractor with non-executive power, reporting to the president, but frankly, this is the first time I've ever heard of the company. However, I can tell you who's in charge if you want."
> "The president of agalmic.holdings.root.184.97.AB5 is agalmic.holdings.root.184.97.201. The secretary is agalmic.holdings.root.184.D5, and the chair is agalmic.holdings.root.184.E8.FF. All the shares are owned by those companies in equal measure, and I can tell you that their regulations are written in Python. Have a nice day, now!"<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 10 |
programmingcirclejerk | G3Kappa | gb298fa | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>"GDPR and other 21st century issues"<|eor|><|sor|>/uj I seriously got mad at that sentence. Like, there should be a limit to how much of a fucking inconsiderate piece of shit you can be. The way it's worded, easily dismissed as a minor legal nuisance to get around... The very mentality according to which laws are made to be circumvented should be something to be ashamed of, something that you don't speak publicly about; but no, apparently it's the mark of a successful entrepreneur, and the reason legalese terminology has the semantic density of DNA.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 10 |
programmingcirclejerk | bo0O0od | gazcp2g | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>/uj Can't jerk, actually interesting
/rj Delaware solves the head-of-line blocking problem, QUIC blown the fuck out<|eor|><|sor|> <unjerk>
in reality a strategy like this could only work
in Delaware itself, right? EU should still be free
to apply GDPR as it sees fit.
</unjerk><|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 7 |
programmingcirclejerk | republitard_2 | gb1bxpj | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>"GDPR and other 21st century issues"<|eor|><|sor|>God I hate that I have to deal with issues such as privacy and respecting peoples personal information. Such a nuisance for my company, why cant I just sell someones identity?<|eor|><|sor|>This is why we need blockchain. My business of blackmailing people with stolen nude selfies wouldn't be viable without it!<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 7 |
programmingcirclejerk | ProfessorSexyTime | gb01pal | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>> this has to be the craziest i read in 2020, so sudo llc init is going to be a thing soon?
>> Speak for yourself pet lover! Im setting mine up from a terraform file.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 5 |
programmingcirclejerk | ProgVal | gb2xgbg | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>"GDPR and other 21st century issues"<|eor|><|sor|>/uj I seriously got mad at that sentence. Like, there should be a limit to how much of a fucking inconsiderate piece of shit you can be. The way it's worded, easily dismissed as a minor legal nuisance to get around... The very mentality according to which laws are made to be circumvented should be something to be ashamed of, something that you don't speak publicly about; but no, apparently it's the mark of a successful entrepreneur, and the reason legalese terminology has the semantic density of DNA.<|eor|><|sor|>It's not their fault, their HN profile says they are "ethically challenged" :(<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 5 |
programmingcirclejerk | OctagonClock | gb1ru4a | <|sols|><|sot|>The idea is a tech company can use this new structure to put each microservice into its own LLC and basically operate as its own company that communicates with others through a rich API and formal company communications.<|eot|><|sol|>https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24975692<|eol|><|sor|>/uj Can't jerk, actually interesting
/rj Delaware solves the head-of-line blocking problem, QUIC blown the fuck out<|eor|><|sor|> <unjerk>
in reality a strategy like this could only work
in Delaware itself, right? EU should still be free
to apply GDPR as it sees fit.
</unjerk><|eor|><|sor|>The EU would see right through it fine the everliving shit out of the parent company for trying to be clever when breaking the GDPR<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 5 |
programmingcirclejerk | dscottboggs | hymx3b | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 138 |
programmingcirclejerk | Risc12 | fze2v49 | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>Not bloatware, Use in embedded systems, Has built in ORM
One of these is not like the others<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 93 |
programmingcirclejerk | haskell_leghumper | fzdyzx9 | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>What's the actual state of this language nowadays? The [github repo](https://github.com/vlang/v) seems surprisingly active, at the very least.<|eor|><|sor|>It's a live trial run of the infinite monkey theorem for programming language development.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 91 |
programmingcirclejerk | ECUIYCAMOICIQMQACKKE | fze27ma | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>[removed]<|eor|><|sor|>quick rundown:
\>rust bows to vlang
\>rumoured to give user psychic abilities
\>you likely use vlang software right now
\>vlang is 1 year old, from the space-time reference point of the base human
\>in reality, it is timeless being existing in all points of time and space from the big vlang to the end of the universe
\>as fast as c
\>compiles to native binaries
\>no null
\>no global variables
\>compiles 1 million loc/sec
\>can translate c into v
\>http interface via /usr/bin/curl
\>$6,276 in donations so far
\>hello world leaks memory<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 68 |
programmingcirclejerk | Puzomor | fzdqd3z | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>Without a doubt, I knew exactly which language was the topic, before I even clicked the link. Why is it called vlang when it's obvious it should be called best_lang?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 65 |
programmingcirclejerk | Puzomor | fzdvenw | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>What's the actual state of this language nowadays? The [github repo](https://github.com/vlang/v) seems surprisingly active, at the very least.<|eor|><|sor|>I'd tell you but it's known that v maintainers lurk here, waiting to jump you in case you try to say something, demanding endless explanations for your misbehavior and I don't want to do that.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 48 |
programmingcirclejerk | MisterOfScience | fzebggz | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>Not bloatware, Use in embedded systems, Has built in ORM
One of these is not like the others<|eor|><|sor|>Are you telling me that you want embedded systems without Oracle? Who's your line manager?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 45 |
programmingcirclejerk | camelCaseIsWebScale | fze5fjf | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>Ah vlang.
The author read the Golang talk from Rob Pike uncle, read exactly 3 HackerNews comments about it, respectively complaining about lack of immutability, lack of generics, and existence of null. Combined with somewhere in his CS first year textbook recommending that global variables are evil, he created a new programming language.
Who knew! Add immutablity and generics to Go language and conquer the world.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 39 |
programmingcirclejerk | CodenameLambda | fzebo7a | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>[removed]<|eor|><|sor|>I think this quote from the docs sums it up quite nicely:
> V functions are pure by default, meaning that their return values are a function of their arguments only, and their evaluation has no side effects (besides I/O).
Also: Sum types are a typesafe `union` like `std::variant` in C++, enums are enums.
Also:
> V combines Option and Result into one type, so you don't need to decide which one to use.
(where it's really `Result` with an error that has to be a string)
Also: Using pointers in any way needs an unsafe block, but C FFI involving pointers doesn't
Also:
> To improve safety and maintainability, operator overloading is limited:
> Calling other functions inside operator functions is not allowed.
Also: Assembly doesn't appear to need an `unsafe` block either
/uj It's pretty much combining a bunch of hyped features from languages with different philosophies together, which is pretty much doomed to not yield a coherent language. But some parts are significant improvements to Go that actually make sense, specifically generics and the basic idea behind error handling.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 27 |
programmingcirclejerk | camelCaseIsWebScale | fze4w0u | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>What's the actual state of this language nowadays? The [github repo](https://github.com/vlang/v) seems surprisingly active, at the very least.<|eor|><|sor|>Take a look at issues section.
> What's the state of language
The state is also called Enthusiastic Youngster Condensate.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 26 |
programmingcirclejerk | logicchains | fze6exf | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>Without a doubt, I knew exactly which language was the topic, before I even clicked the link. Why is it called vlang when it's obvious it should be called best_lang?<|eor|><|sor|>I on the other hand was completely shocked that the language wasn't what I expected from the topic. How could one language hope to rule them all if it doesn't even have bloody move semantics or threads without race conditions?!?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 25 |
programmingcirclejerk | F54280 | fzey4er | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>[removed]<|eor|><|sor|>I think this quote from the docs sums it up quite nicely:
> V functions are pure by default, meaning that their return values are a function of their arguments only, and their evaluation has no side effects (besides I/O).
Also: Sum types are a typesafe `union` like `std::variant` in C++, enums are enums.
Also:
> V combines Option and Result into one type, so you don't need to decide which one to use.
(where it's really `Result` with an error that has to be a string)
Also: Using pointers in any way needs an unsafe block, but C FFI involving pointers doesn't
Also:
> To improve safety and maintainability, operator overloading is limited:
> Calling other functions inside operator functions is not allowed.
Also: Assembly doesn't appear to need an `unsafe` block either
/uj It's pretty much combining a bunch of hyped features from languages with different philosophies together, which is pretty much doomed to not yield a coherent language. But some parts are significant improvements to Go that actually make sense, specifically generics and the basic idea behind error handling.<|eor|><|sor|>> To improve safety and maintainability, operator overloading is limited: Calling other functions inside operator functions is not allowed.
I love this concept of random limitations for safety and maintainability . Whats next?
* for safety and maintainability, only 2 functions can be called in the body of a ``for`` loop
* for safety and maintainability, ``if`` statements must occur on even line numbers
* for safety and maintainability, function names must contain more consonants than vowels and be at least 3 characters long
* for safety and maintainability, constructors cannot call other constructors
Edit: typo<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 25 |
programmingcirclejerk | posting_drunk_naked | fzed79z | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>vlang? That's not how you spell Rust.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 23 |
programmingcirclejerk | victor_sales | fzekrgw | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>> [...] Vlang creator and contributors guaranteed backward compatility as it progress and the same goes with its safety features.
Where have I seen a language that guarantees backwards compatibility and everyone kinda hates this?
Not sure, no time to think, my 30 LoC software with 9k LoC CMake config just finished compiling, oh boy.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 20 |
programmingcirclejerk | secdeal | fzf5y47 | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>[removed]<|eor|><|sor|>I think this quote from the docs sums it up quite nicely:
> V functions are pure by default, meaning that their return values are a function of their arguments only, and their evaluation has no side effects (besides I/O).
Also: Sum types are a typesafe `union` like `std::variant` in C++, enums are enums.
Also:
> V combines Option and Result into one type, so you don't need to decide which one to use.
(where it's really `Result` with an error that has to be a string)
Also: Using pointers in any way needs an unsafe block, but C FFI involving pointers doesn't
Also:
> To improve safety and maintainability, operator overloading is limited:
> Calling other functions inside operator functions is not allowed.
Also: Assembly doesn't appear to need an `unsafe` block either
/uj It's pretty much combining a bunch of hyped features from languages with different philosophies together, which is pretty much doomed to not yield a coherent language. But some parts are significant improvements to Go that actually make sense, specifically generics and the basic idea behind error handling.<|eor|><|sor|>> To improve safety and maintainability, operator overloading is limited: Calling other functions inside operator functions is not allowed.
I love this concept of random limitations for safety and maintainability . Whats next?
* for safety and maintainability, only 2 functions can be called in the body of a ``for`` loop
* for safety and maintainability, ``if`` statements must occur on even line numbers
* for safety and maintainability, function names must contain more consonants than vowels and be at least 3 characters long
* for safety and maintainability, constructors cannot call other constructors
Edit: typo<|eor|><|sor|>max size of tuples is 3<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 15 |
programmingcirclejerk | Zlodo2 | fzfimdd | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>can vlang compile a hello world that doesn't trigger valgrind errors yet<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 14 |
programmingcirclejerk | Laugarhraun | fzebs18 | <|sols|><|sot|>It will gonna be the TOP language (the one programming language to rule them all)<|eot|><|sol|>https://reddit.com/r/vlang/comments/hy9o38/python_and_vlang_in_common/fzdlr1p<|eol|><|sor|>What's the actual state of this language nowadays? The [github repo](https://github.com/vlang/v) seems surprisingly active, at the very least.<|eor|><|sor|>I'd tell you but it's known that v maintainers lurk here, waiting to jump you in case you try to say something, demanding endless explanations for your misbehavior and I don't want to do that.<|eor|><|sor|>I'm putting this in my copypasta folder.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 14 |
programmingcirclejerk | NAchOLIbReee_ | chlroc | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 137 |
programmingcirclejerk | rubdos | euutl78 | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|>Next step: rewrite it in Rust, compile to webasm.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 106 |
programmingcirclejerk | nullvoxpopuli | euuv9zb | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|>So it's a DE that a min requirement of 8gb RAM? Cool. I have too much RAM as is.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 84 |
programmingcirclejerk | AprilSpektra | euuzngv | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|>So it's a DE that a min requirement of 8gb RAM? Cool. I have too much RAM as is.<|eor|><|sor|>Literally every bargain-bin laptop these days has 128 GB of RAM, so 8 GB is nothing.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 77 |
programmingcirclejerk | Waghlon | euuwv7y | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|>Next step: rewrite it in Rust, compile to webasm.<|eor|><|sor|>Then open source it via ASMR<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 66 |
programmingcirclejerk | -victorisawesome- | euv4lh2 | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|>> Currently the shell is only readily available on Manjaro Linux.
Too pussy to use arch, I see?<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 62 |
programmingcirclejerk | Graf_Blutwurst | euw28nc | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|>Next step: rewrite it in Rust, compile to webasm.<|eor|><|sor|>Then open source it via ASMR<|eor|><|sor|>This is how I make sure my sourcecode is protected against intellectual theft. I only `git push` flac files of me softly reading the source code i wrote into a high quality microphone.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 44 |
programmingcirclejerk | CodeReclaimers | euvvegv | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|>> Currently the shell is only readily available on Manjaro Linux.
Too pussy to use arch, I see?<|eor|><|sor|>I'd like to reply with a snarky comment, but I'm still waiting on my Gentoo system to rebuild after installing auto-snark.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 37 |
programmingcirclejerk | carbolymer | euuzfew | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|>When you combine WebDad with WebMom, you can yield many more webshits!<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 28 |
programmingcirclejerk | trdlts | euw38o7 | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|><uj> I had a look at the video describing it, and it's definitely not for me - I hate to use the mouse for once - but it's not a reason to shit on the work of someone releasing a DE for linux </uj><|eor|><|sor|>name checks out<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 27 |
programmingcirclejerk | rileyphone | euvd60i | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|>So it's a DE that a min requirement of 8gb RAM? Cool. I have too much RAM as is.<|eor|><|sor|>Literally every bargain-bin laptop these days has 128 GB of RAM, so 8 GB is nothing.<|eor|><|sor|>[deleted]<|eor|><|sor|>Ramdisk has legit use cases tho<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 23 |
programmingcirclejerk | 10xelectronguru | euvd6ie | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|><uj> I had a look at the video describing it, and it's definitely not for me - I hate to use the mouse for once - but it's not a reason to shit on the work of someone releasing a DE for linux </uj><|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 20 |
programmingcirclejerk | Volt | euw28cd | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|>The DE equivalent of a dadbod<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 19 |
programmingcirclejerk | northrupthebandgeek | euwlhwn | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|>Next step: rewrite it in Rust, compile to webasm.<|eor|><|sor|>Then open source it via ASMR<|eor|><|sor|>Word on the street is some people protect their IP by only pushing lossless audio files of them reading the source code aloud.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 16 |
programmingcirclejerk | anatolya | euwobzj | <|sols|><|sot|>Meet Jade, a Desktop Environment for Linux Built Using Web Tech<|eot|><|sol|>https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2019/07/meet-the-jade-desktop-environment-for-linux-a-shell-built-using-web-tech<|eol|><|sor|>I hope this will finally seal the deal for year of the Linux desktop.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 14 |
programmingcirclejerk | jamfour | cb8d9e | <|sols|><|sot|>People complain Electron is bloatedbut like, all of our computers are already bloated, and theres at least a 40% chance that Im bloated right now and it doesnt mean you should love me any less<|eot|><|sol|>https://bits.ashleyblewer.com/blog/2019/06/29/rsync-guis-power-control-design-and-decisions/<|eol|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 140 |
programmingcirclejerk | RalphORama | ete3olh | <|sols|><|sot|>People complain Electron is bloatedbut like, all of our computers are already bloated, and theres at least a 40% chance that Im bloated right now and it doesnt mean you should love me any less<|eot|><|sol|>https://bits.ashleyblewer.com/blog/2019/06/29/rsync-guis-power-control-design-and-decisions/<|eol|><|sor|>> People dont care that an application is a streamlined 3MB or a big round 200MB boy they care that it works for them and it makes them feel good about using it.
[mfw I open my favorite 300mb music visualizer and it only uses half a gig of RAM](https://i.redd.it/yhb6wfnd0q321.png)<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 94 |
programmingcirclejerk | iamtrashwater | ete20le | <|sols|><|sot|>People complain Electron is bloatedbut like, all of our computers are already bloated, and theres at least a 40% chance that Im bloated right now and it doesnt mean you should love me any less<|eot|><|sol|>https://bits.ashleyblewer.com/blog/2019/06/29/rsync-guis-power-control-design-and-decisions/<|eol|><|sor|>> and theres at least a 40% chance that right now I am bloated, and it doesnt mean you should love me any less
I wish I could be this insulated from reality.<|eor|><|sor|>Im 200% bloated after tonights takeout and my wife has rolled over without saying goodnight once again.<|eor|><|eols|><|endoftext|> | 33 |
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