@alex insightful, calling out the maintainence burden originating from profiteering freeloaders.
Open-source work is a resume for many, and they want commercially useful projects there. If not for that, the volunteer tech stack could be very different (for the better?), and not worth free-loading off of.
"This is open-source software written by hobbyists, maintained by a single volunteer, badly tested, written in a memory-unsafe language and full of security bugs. It is foolish to use this software to process untrusted data. As such, we treat security issues like any other bug. Each security report we receive will be made public immediately and won't be prioritized."
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/libxml2/-/issues/913
"Maddie Hall, who worked on special projects at OpenAI, founded Living Carbon. This public benefit company aims to combat climate change by genetically enhancing trees to capture and store more CO2. Living Carbon has raised $36 million from Felicis."
https://www.everythingstartups.com/article/the-11-tech-mafias-ruling-silicon-valley
Or you could, you know, just put all that money into getting more trees planted. Setting up local nurseries for eco-sourced varieties, acquiring marginal land for reserves, etc.
@11220 All valid points, but progress would look like adding that extra functionality for the same compute, not exponentially increased compute cost for the equivalent service (in this case base OS).
Also, I'm guessing a bunch of that 2GB of memory in constant use is spying on me, on behalf of Goggle and the OEM. I presume you're not counting that as ...
> doing work we’ve come to expect, invisibly
My Android has 8GB of memory. That should be enough for a small server. More than 2GB of that is running Android itself, and a bunch of other background stuff that's always on.
Not so long ago I was running laptops with 2GB total system memory. The OS used about 2GB of hard disk, and far less memory while running.
Is this supposed to represent progress? The more compute you use to do essentially the same job, the better it is?
@icedquinn yup. A variation: I remember India's pioneering modern music band saying they struggled to put out their second album, even after a successful first album - because the record industry doesn't care about music (!), they only care about numbers and most second albums don't do well.
I don't contribute to @haiku at the moment, but one of the most important things I have taken from that project is that "breaking the monotony of the competition" is arguably a goal that is just as valid as becoming mainstream or useful.
@Lemmus @m3tti #Factor https://factorcode.org sounds like what you described. They are very, very far down that road.
@troed
One simple non-capitalist model of operating any activity: attribution, not ownership
https://youtu.be/1WIulCmIHZ4
So, projects could be set up to redirect funding upstream per a mechanically-computed distribution.
@bagder
@bagder Initiatives like @copiepublique could help here.
@Zykino They primarily do it because they can and don't need to pay - totally independently of if they are small players or giant corporations.
And they're right. The can and are legally allowed to.
"Nah, surely someone else will sponsor the project. We certainly don't want to. We never did. It's still here and works well after decades, which proves us right."
/ almost every company
#deltatauri is ready for testing.
https://support.delta.chat/t/help-test-the-tauri-pre-release/3827
DeltaTauri is basically #deltachat_desktop , but using #tauri instead of electron.
Full Blogpost will follow soon.
I cannot overstate how much I hate the short character limits on most instances here. It does not make people post short, concise messages (as if brevity is even a thing I’d want to optimise for) it makes people post essays as sequences of 47 toots. Which then all appear in my timeline. In reverse order.
pro-libre software, pro-holisticism
pro-communalism, anti-consumerism
fan of #Plan9 and #HaikuOS
anti-witchhunt, see https://stallmansupport.org
I write software (C++) for a living.