principles of software distillation:
Old software is usually small and new software is usually large. A distilled program can be old or new, but is always small, and is powerful by its choice of ideas, not its implementation size.
A distilled program has the conciseness of an initial version and the refinement of a final version.
A distilled program is a finished work, but remains hackable due to its small size, allowing it to serve as the starting point for new works.
Many people write programs, but few stick with a program long enough to distill it.
@lorry Or he believes his electoral base does not know the difference.
Cursed English
English words I am mad about, part 3719: Bureaucracy. I can never for the life of me remember how to spell this dirty fucker. It's so easy in German: Bürokratie. I mean come on, a word that's actually easier to spell in German? That's not how this was supposed to work out!
@jimbob @andrewrk @jarekrozanski
I mean people who are like you but with less of a moral spine.
I don't think you get to take that advice and hope they don't.
I think you play the META and expect everyone else to also play the META.
@andrewrk perhaps "Ask for forgiveness, not permission" attitude did do more bad than good afterall.
@soatok what I don't get is why you take this opportunity to attack #pgp in general, like taking the opportunity to push for some agenda, the site is called gpg.fail, GPG not PGP, most of the problems are related to gpg or some C code implementation bug, or using gpg and others in the command line and getting tricked by some ansi printing in the terminal, how that translates to "let's kill pgp"? ex. none of the listed problems affect #DeltaChat at all
(I was present in the gpg.fail talk btw)
It's true: the more technical background and pre-conceptions you have, the more more likely you run into trouble with #deltachat 😂
Don't think so much! 😉
@Migueldeicaza @sinbad and you know, the thing really hurting the Microsoft brand is all that C and C++ code.
Ignore the anti consumer behavior, shit products, cloud services for genocide, and overall mask-off evil stuff.
But the original web is still there, it's just infinitely harder to find if all you look at is the behemoths. To be happy in our little bubble is hard since we are social people and we want to be where everyone else are.
And it's very hard to trust the small ones that are trying to create something nice. When they have built a nice user base there is always a risk that they sell everything and letting one of the behemoths take over the wheel.
It was different only until it became a commerce and branding/PR channel. Then that mostly drowned out everything else.
And we should consider “social media” as completely owned by commerce (ads) and PR (promoted posts, etc). Some of it is corporate, some of it is political, but all of it is harmful.
Congrats to @ruby for 30 years of productivity and joy ❤️🎂
The first public release 0.95 was announced on December 21, 1995.
@catsalad Hmm. Shouldn't it be more like:
🔲 Spaces
🔲 Tabs
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.