I think I did this informally anyway 10 years ago.
Irrelevant. You can sublicense MIT to GPL by forking if you’re so inclined.
That’s a great point. I hadn’t thought about it quite that way before. Thanks.
I had to think about this a bit. Ultimately, I still can’t think of any historical precedents where a people reacted proactively to a threat with relatively unknown consequences (to the individual). Maybe I’m missing something.
While it does no harm (and in fact probably makes sense) to invest in multiple strategies to fight climate change as a society, I have to admit that I don’t think attempting to change people’s minds regarding climate change is the most effectual. Consider that not only do you have to convince the “Western” world (which already has a high standard of living) to reduce emissions, you also have to somewhat repress development of nations which are striving to industrialize and will almost certainly be emitting more greenhouse and toxic gases in the future. See China, India, Africa, etc.
I agree that blaming consumers is counter-productive to the goal of convincing society to be more sustainable, but given the limited time we have, technologies like carbon capture, fusion, massive solar/wind, should be the core strategy in ameliorating the effects of climate change.
Slowing/stopping/reversing climate change could be achieved much more readily if “people” (in general or specifically activists) were willing to accept some sacrifice, which is to say decrease in their standard of living.
However, I think that’s a third rail that no one wants to touch. See “veganism is too hard”, “biking takes too long”, “I’m really busy, I have to use plastic water bottles”, etc. There are of course people for which it really is not possible, but also many where they are just unwilling to sacrifice.
Therefore, the only way to maintain our current standard of living while ameliorating climate change is through rapid technological advancement. I’m not hopeful.
Look at the European, having to only stock metric screw sizes, so lucky. Kidding!
I’m definitely going to try this out. Looks great!
I don’t support the .NET Framework
which is a dependency of most (all?) of the -arr suite. It’s a fairly divisive and niche argument so I didn’t bring it up initially, but I try to reduce my reliance on proprietary software and hardware as much as possible.
I would vote for syncthing as it can have better support if you need syncing across work firewalls. Also allows device-to-device sync, not just server-device. It’s a cool federated solution (like lemmy!).
Good to know! I’m still at the vim+markdown+LaTeX for equations mode, but other than for math stuff I can’t be bothered for LaTeX. I wish collaborators would be open to LaTeX rather than Google Docs or the highway.
I’m not a big fan of the -arr suite so I use Headphones.
Surely the support for LaTeX is the killer feature with your math class, not emacs vs. vim.
In addition to what others have said, I don’t store cookies between browser sessions. This of course removes all your logins but eliminates cookie fingerprinting.
What do you use it for? That should be the biggest factor in determining the specs, no?
I personally backup a lot of tv and movies. I prefer using fewer large drives, e.g. 14TB WD Reds
Works flawlessly.
Use custom curl scripts to get some internet calendars that also works flawlessly.
Been doing this for almost a decade now.