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[-] hunger@programming.dev 3 points 3 days ago

Not only that: It protects your data. The Unix security model is unfortunately stuck in the 1970s: It protects users from each other. That is a wonderful property, but in todays world you also need to protect the users from the applications they are running: Anything running as your user has access to all your data. And on most computer systems the interesting data is the one the users out there: Cryptogrqphic keys, login information, financial information, ... . Typically users are much more upset to loose their data than about some virus infecting the OS files, those are trivial to fix.

Running anything as anlther user stops that application from having access to most of your data.

[-] hunger@programming.dev 6 points 6 days ago

The same happens with any of the new immutable distributions. It's just less effort as you do not need to do the nix configuration dance anymore.

[-] hunger@programming.dev 4 points 1 week ago

Any of the many immutable distros (vanilla os, fedora silverblue, bluefin, aeon, endless os, pure os, ...) will all obviously work.

Most of your customizations will live in your home directory anyway, so the details of the host OS do not matter too much. As long as it comes with the UI you like, you will be mostly fine. And yku said you like gnome, that installs many apps from flathub anyway and they work just fine from there.

For development work you just set up a distrobox/toolbox container and are ready to go with everything you need. I much prefer that over working on the "real system" as I can have different environments for different projects and do not have to polute my system with all kinds of dependencies that are useless to the functionality of my system.

NixOS is ofmcourse also an option and is quasi-immutable, but it is also much more complicated to manage.

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[-] hunger@programming.dev 3 points 4 months ago

I'd go for open source projects. They usually have bigger code bases and good practices, that they enforce on their contributors with code reviews and such.

It's a good way to get feedback on your code, something miss out on personal projects and get much less of in university and corporate projects.

[-] hunger@programming.dev 1 points 5 months ago

Github login does not help much... devs are on github, not on random forgjo instances. That's where they see your project. Github is also where they put their fork of your project when they play with it. They will write comments using github markdown and won't care whether that renders correctly or not in your forge.

And it is where they will report issues and open a PR. It is annoying, but it is how it is. When you ask them to open the PR elsewhere they complain sinde they need to set up an account there and copy ssh key and similar things. You need a very dedicated contributor to go through with all that.... especially if it is just a few lines of drive-by fixes.

[-] hunger@programming.dev 4 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

I never said that you can not run a project elsewhere, my point is that you will get way more interaction on github.

Try pushing your project to github and compare the interactions you get from both forges.

[-] hunger@programming.dev 1 points 5 months ago

That unfortunately requires setting up email... I have not bothered doing so on my boxes in a very long time.

[-] hunger@programming.dev 19 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

The biggest factor to me is developer attention. I had a project on gitlab and pushed a README.md with a link to the gitlab instance into github. I got about 10 times more reactions from github, incl. PRs (where the person had grabbed the code from gitlab and did a PR on github anyway) -- even in this setup. Mirroring a project to github tilts that even further.

Not being present on github means a lot less users and contributors. As long as that stays this way there is no way around github.

I hope federated forges can move some attention away from github, making other forges more visible... but I am not too optimistic :-(

[-] hunger@programming.dev 13 points 5 months ago

The blocking certain countries is a US legal thing. It effects any forge in the US and probably in more areas close to the US. As soon as a forge gets big enough to show up on the radar of government orge they will need to do similar blocking.

You can not really blame github for that part.

[-] hunger@programming.dev 42 points 5 months ago

Rustfmt is not very configurable. That is a wonderful thing: People don't waste time on discussing different formatting options and every bit of rust code looks pretty identical.

[-] hunger@programming.dev 24 points 5 months ago

Why would they need to share ssh keys? Ssh will happily accept dozens of allowed keys.

[-] hunger@programming.dev 16 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

It gets rid of one more SUID binary. That's always a win for security.

Sudo probably is way more comfortable to use and has way more configurable, too -- that usually does not help to make a tool secure either:-)

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Slint is a UI toolkit written in Rust that has bindings for Rust, C++ and Javascript. This is the release blog post for version 1.3.0, featuring updated styles for Windows and Mac and a tech preview of Slint on Android.

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hunger

joined 1 year ago