@framasoft
I really think this video could be much better made to be simpler and more understandable.
I'm very passionate about the preservation and proliferation of the Fediverse. I'd be happy to write a new script and even give my own voice and audio recording.
@framasoft
The vocabulary and script could have been a little simpler and clearer. Introducing and mixing words like "exchange", "provider", "login", "federation", "universe", without much context or definitions inbetween them is very confusing for a non-tech person.
I think we spend so much time as developers that we can sometimes assume most people understand what we say. I know for a fact my non-tech-savy mother wouldn't understand this video. The words go by too fast.
Also, the microphone/voice has too much echo. Get under a bed blanket. It's too quiet against the music.
Constructive critisism over. Thanks for putting the effort into making this video! We definitely need more of this kind of content which defines just the Fediverse as a single concept, and not just "Mastodon", etc.
Keyoxide is a free open source identity verification system, you can follow at:
➡️ @keyoxide
The project's website is at https://keyoxide.org
#KeyOxide #FOSS #FLOSS #Libre #FreeSoftware #OpenSource #Identity #OnlineIdentity #Verification
Announcing the Hare programming language
April 25, 2022 by Drew DeVault
https://harelang.org/blog/2022-04-25-announcing-hare/
Introducing the Hare programming language
Hare is a systems programming language designed to be simple, stable, and robust. Hare uses a static type system, manual memory management, and a minimal runtime. It is well-suited to writing operating systems, system tools, compilers, networking software, and other low-level, high performance tasks.
Announcing the Hare programming language
April 25, 2022
https://harelang.org/blog/2022-04-25-announcing-hare/
"How the C programming language has grown" (Interview with Brian Kernighan)
https://opensource.com/article/22/3/how-c-programming-language-has-grown
@coyote @p @lelouchebag @Comatoast
I'd just like to interject for a moment...
https://qoto.org/@torresjrjr/107439899423731328
So newlines in Markdown code blocks just disappear. The raw ActivityPub data shows no `\n`\
@yarmo
And for completeness' sake,
-V
--version
should print to stdout, ideally a single line like so:
$ python -V # beautifly simple
Python 3.10.4
$ aerc -V # built from master
aerc 0.9.0-11-g037676f
$ zsh --version # maybe some info
zsh 5.8.1 (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu)
$ astronaut -v # small v, oh well
astronaut 0.1.0
Some bad examples:
$ bash --version # bloat!
GNU bash, version 5.1.16(1)-release (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu)
Copyright (C) 2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
This is free software; you are free to change and redistribute it.
There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
Tip (for anyone curious), you can have a kind of global noreferer like so:
<meta name="referrer" content="no-referrer" />
And you can also make use of `<base>`:
<base target="_blank" />
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/base
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/meta
#Smithereen update: group and event invitations!
Yes, these do federate. No, they aren't compatible with anything else out there.
@Seirdy
You might have missed out on Mothra from Plan 9 (though you did put Abaco).
Libre software engineer with physics background.
Maintainer for @hare date/time.
.py .go .ha ...
en es ...
\t <dl> agpl posix 9p