@alexbuzzbee It's missing a lot. Various jursidictions have consumer protections and legal obligations which aren't disclaimed by terms like "everything" unless you enumerate them.
That's why there's that big chunk of boldface text at the bottom of even short licenses like https://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-2-Clause
(And, even then, 2-clause BSD isn't ideal because it's US-centric enough to be questionable about whether it protects the developer from certain obligations present in the EU but not the US)
@tomosaigon @claudiom If you mean these, they offer a new license which overrules the old one and allows you to set a snapshot (recommended) and reset the trial period all you want, but you're only allowed to use them for testing things.
https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-edge/tools/vms/
@brown121407@fosstodon.org You could do as I do. Get pissed off at pieces not working the way you want, rip them out, and replace them with improvised shell scripts.
http://blog.ssokolow.com/archives/2017/08/24/homebrew-update-notifier-update/
(TL;DR: When I upgraded to *buntu 14.04, I got pissed off that the update notifier no longer had an option to turn off the "reboot to update your kernel" nags, so I ripped it out and replaced it with something homemade. In 2017, I rewrote it in Python for nicer UX.)
@vordenken @skunksarebetter I'm not sure what the Linux-based stuff is doing these days, but ESP32 microcontrollers (which do have OTA updates and a partitionable filesystem on top of their Flash) require you to partition two app partitions and OTA is done by downloading into the spare one, verifying, and then flipping the bit which indicates which one to boot.
Further ideas for when I'm feeling like working on it again:
1. Write a custom web remote for my existing Audacious Media Player setup and install https://github.com/masmu/pulseaudio-dlna
(audman exists, but appears to intentionally make design decisions I don't like.)
2. Write a Firefox extension and helper daemon to expose open YouTube tabs to DNLA for on-the-fly youtube-dl-ing and playback.
3. Combine all three prior options into a really polished web remote to supplant my use of Yaacc.
I finally did phase 1 of putting proper entertainment in front of the exercise machines:
1. Install https://www.gnu.org/software/gmediaserver/ on my PC and wrap a shell alias around `gmediaserver -p <PORT> --profile=ps3 <FOLDER>` on my PC.
2. `ufw allow <PORT>` on my PC
3. `Settings → Services → UPnP → Allow control of Kodi via UPnP` on my https://openelec.tv/ box.
4. Install these two packages onto an old phone for a remote:
https://f-droid.org/en/packages/de.yaacc/
https://f-droid.org/en/packages/org.xbmc.kore/
@skunksarebetter Generally negative. This has cropped up under various whitewashes over the decades since open-source became a thing ("Open Core" is the one I remember most clearly).
The #1 thing that never changes is that it presents an economic incentive to cripple the open-source version.
An example of a healthier model would be "free for self-hosting, subsidized by the vendor's cloud-hosted offering".
@lupyuen Reminds me of how the Confederacy was key in making Egypt a supplier of cotton by trying to strong-arm Britain into joining their side of the U.S. civil war.
If you squeeze off trade patterns with people, they'll establish alternatives and, once set up, those alternatives stay.
@crackurbones The synopsis sounds interesting but, for stuff on livescience.com, I only see the article for a second before I get dumped into 404ed page that reloads once every second or so.
...I'm assuming they never tested their site under the influence of tools like NoScript or uMatrix.
@floppy My first impression was that it's built on the same Dash docsets that https://zealdocs.org/ uses but it looks like they wrote their own scraper.
(Dash is a paid offline documentation browser for macOS and its creator allows Zeal (an open-source clone for Windows and Linux) to piggyback on Dash's docset repository on the condition that Zeal not try to support macOS.)
@vordenken I'm preparing to rethink things but, currently:
1. Mirror non-blacklisted stuff in my /home to my four other drives (one external, only two of the same age and model) nightly using rdiff-backup with a two-week retention window
2. Mirror all of four drives to the fifth (a 6TB WD Red) nightly using rsync (rdiff-backup can't expire just some large files early)
3. Put my creations on GitHub (public) or BitBucket (private) ASAP
4. Manual DVD+R backups (with dvdisaster) for bulk stuff
@VikingKong@fosstodon.org @hund@linuxrocks.online It's not a movement.
The idea is that a lot of people are going to get infected either way but, if it happens too quickly, it will overwhelm the healthcare system's ability to keep up with demand and doctors will have to choose who lives and who dies when there isn't enough to go around.
Spreading it out over a longer period of time allows:
1. Hospitals to scale up by doing things like acquiring more ventilators.
2. Some people to recover (or die despite doctors' efforts) and free up space for new arrivals
Explaining the joke
There's an old verbal joke that goes "Perl is like a pair of vice grips. You can do anything with it, and it's the wrong tool for every job."
@dropdan @david *chuckle* Mine *is* my bedroom and it's also what I'd describe with adjectives like organized, cozy, nerdy, and colorful.
I need to clean up a bit before I feel comfortable putting up a photo of the current state of my work machine for posterity, but here's the corner of the room that I reserve for retro-hobby work back around the beginning of 2017.
@kev @yetiops@fosstodon.org Oh, also, not going 4K makes things *much* less expensive. The last time I bought new was in 2007 and I still need to crack open that now-dead matched pair of 1280x1024 displays and recap them.
My current setup is a a $7 passive DP-to-DVI adapter, a 1280x1024 monitor a family member found, fully-functional, in an eWaste bin, a 1920x1080 monitor a family friend gave me when upgrading, and a 1280x1024 monitor a friend gave me because the power button was broken.
I've also got some spare 1280x1024 monitors from thrift stores that ran between $7 and $15 and a 1280x1024 monitor that I got earlier from the local non-chain used games shop for $30.
(I haven't needed to check pawn shops yet and, if I can find time to practice desoldering and recap the half dozen dead LCDs under the basement stairs, I may not need to for a *long* time.)
@kev @yetiops@fosstodon.org Likewise. I've got a 1280x1024, 1920x1080, 1280x1024 spread (photo after I clean up a bit) and, if I go 4K, it'll probably be a large-format display with the same pixel depth but equivalent to adding a second row of monitors.
Questionable Linux HiDPI without compositing aside, I spec my systems based on not having air conditioning and I'm used to this pixel depth.
(Not to mention, I grew up on laptops. When I moved from CRTs to desktop LCDs, my reaction was "I've come home!")
Linux user, open-source enthusiast, science buff, and retro-hobbyist who occasionally reviews fanfiction.