Professional developer and amateur gardener located near Atlanta, GA in the USA.
Yeah exactly. The Drive Sync hasn’t been too bad but OneDrive app is much more limited and I’m afraid to use it because it’s so flaky. Especially on non-Windows.
Awesome. I wonder if I can incorporate OneDrive easily. I’m on a family plan and have 1 TB of storage. Maybe there’s a way to upload stuff to OneDrive without the garbage of OneDrive.
I think venv is the best because it’s built in. But I’m also not a Python dev.
No, the dependency management in Python is a nightmare. There’s like a billion options for it.
Oh, is it like a Dropbox but without a cloud?
Well, I guess we’re a little past the year mark but I really like Lemmy and Jerboa lol.
You’ve marked your account as a bot but you appear to be a human. You should fix this in settings because some people filter out bot content.
That’s how swatting works though. They don’t just call 911 and say “send police to this place” lol.
There might be, the Lemmy REST API is not super well documented.
I disagree with a few points of that article.
Another misunderstanding of “open source” is the idea that it means “not using the GNU GPL.” This tends to accompany another misunderstanding that “free software” means “GPL-covered software.” These are both mistaken, since the GNU GPL qualifies as an open source license and most of the open source licenses qualify as free software licenses. There are many free software licenses aside from the GNU GPL.
You do too by using the term FOSS instead of FLOSS,
The terms “FLOSS” and “FOSS” are used to be neutral between free software and open source. If neutrality is your goal, “FLOSS” is the better of the two, since it really is neutral. But if you want to stand up for freedom, using a neutral term isn’t the way. Standing up for freedom entails showing people your support for freedom.
The FSF and OSI agree on many of the licenses they approve as being free/open. If you can tell me of any notable differences that aren’t a matter of one of them not commenting on a particular license yet then I’d be open to change my opinion on it.
Regardless, even if you believe the OSD and FSF’s definition of libre software differ, merely having the source available is not enough to meet what the OSD defines as open source. Which is what this conversation was originally about.
Many people work from home and don’t have very many Internet providers in their area. In a post COVID world, many people are never getting a job in an office. They can’t risk losing their job over losing Internet access over piracy.
It’s possible it’s non standard, I believe it is a Play Store policy to be able to report all forms of user generated content.
Dikestra
I see an option to report a user via their profile page in Jerboa.
I’m just using Gmail lol. I don’t really do anything with email.
The title and question are different, what exactly are you asking? I don’t see currency as a concept ever going away.
I never got around to using WSL for dev stuff, sadly. I was stuck on Windows 7 until December 2019 and have had a Mac for work ever since. For personal stuff I just use the MSYS environment included in Git for windows (it has bash and a few other things). If I ever got a Windows laptop for work again I’d probably put the time in to learn WSL.
What’s the difference? I rarely use Python and every time I do I have to relearn which tools are the go to ones. In Java it’s a little simpler, we really just have Maven and Gradle. They have their own problems, sure, what tool doesn’t, but the thing that annoys me about python is the quantity of tools. There often isn’t a clear winner.
Now, to be fair to python, a lot of the ones mentioned on this post are very specifically for data science use cases and not general purpose development.