This is a great idea, thank you!
This is a great idea, thank you!
Am I to understand that Valve is on the side of content creators, ensuring that AI models that used copyrighted content for training cannot be used to generate game artwork on their platform? If so, I’m glad. This should be the rule everywhere. Right?
It’s interesting that the bulk of the article is suggesting that this is a bit overblown.
Quote: "The International Council of Beverages Associations’ executive director Kate Loatman said public health authorities should be “deeply concerned” by the “leaked opinion”, and also warned it “could needlessly mislead consumers into consuming more sugar rather than choosing safe no-and low-sugar options.”
Why?
Lame. AR is something I’m really hopeful about.
I had issues searching for Lemmy communities until I updated my docker-compose to give the “lemmy” container it’s own network.
Here’s a post on Mastodon that links to their blog where they describe different clients.
I haven’t experienced any crashes. I’m just getting annoyed with it resetting the view when I rotate my phone by accident. It takes me back to Local and changes my filter back to default. Painful.
I feel like putting it in a VM is probably overkill. I just have everything running in Docker containers and it’s pretty good like that.
How does this work with the code license? If this is all fine, doesn’t this mean that we should be avoiding the kind of license they’re using in the future?
Thanks!
This is awesome! Thank you!
I have a lot of interest in software development (and the Rust programming language specifically). Any plans to add a software development community? I don’t know of any feeds, though.
My first programming language was QBasic, then Visual Basic, then Java, then C# (most experience with), then C++, then Python, and now Rust. Only when I learned C++ in college did I truly grasp the power of memory management. I think it’s important for new programmers to have some understanding of and experience with pointers, but it doesn’t need to be your first language. I think it’s okay to start with Python or C#, but you’ll want to go back and learn the hard stuff at some point (C++ and then Rust). Python will be super easy to learn the basics (data structures, algorithms, etc.). C# is also a good choice, but has you learning a few more things at the same time you’re trying to learn the basics.
They share a genealogy, but as programs are created and maintained in different languages, developers come to wish for different syntaxes that would (1) reduce how much code must be written to accomplish a common logical task, (2) make the code that’s written easier to read/understand, (3) reduce concerns about variable types until runtime, and/or (4) overly restrict not just the variable types but also if/when variables can be modified. This list is not exhaustive.
There is a partial programming language family tree here, showing which languages influenced other languages: https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Genealogy-of-Programming-Languages_fig36_260447599
I don’t miss the endless commercials.
Maybe that’s what I should do. I’ve just recently moved back to VS Code from Neovim due to my constant issues with the LSP I was using. I would open a file, make some changes, and then return to the file tree along with a bunch of LSP warnings (as if the file tree was a file). LazyVim sounds like exactly what I want, if the name is accurate.
It’s science like this that gets you thinking… /s
I did not expect to enjoy that video as much as I did.
Thanks for sharing your solution. I also would have thought that you could auto-redirect within the nginx config from “www” to the root domain, no? Idk if that would have any impact on the SSL functionality.
That’s strange. Please let me know what you find out.