I finally watched the talk today and that wasn't what I thought he meant. What I thought he was getting at was that the rust parts of the kernel interact with lots of other modules written by people who don't know rust. When those C modules change their semantics in ways that break the rust code, they can't go fix it because they don't know rust. In fact, whenever they make a change, they don't even know if they broke some rust module, because they don't understand the rust code well enough. And this is something that everyone is going to have to live with for the foreseeable future, because you can't force all those other kernel hackers to learn rust.
It's also worth noting that before bevy, there was a rust game engine called Amethyst, which was planning on using a scripting language for gameplay code. Not having to use a scripting language, but getting to use rust instead, was one of the big selling points of Bevy overr Amethyst.
You can charge for FOSS, but you can't prevent the first person who buys your software from sharing it with everyone else for free.
Sometimes I'll start up ConnectBot, which is an android ssh client, on my meta quest. Then I connect to my laptop and attach to a running tmux session so I can use the laptop keyboard but see the text in a virtual window.
My actual laptop setup is pretty boring though
I remember getting into political arguments that went nowhere at the time but resulted in me changing my mind years later. The people I argued with never knew about my change of heart. As far as they knew I was one of those people who get more entrenched in their beliefs.
What I'm getting at is that your arguments can hit home without looking like it. What you're seeing as getting defensive could just be the early stages for them changing their minds.
This can be especially true if someone's political beliefs are part of their identity. You don't make those kind of changes all at once.
So I'd say just argue in good faith, don't try to score points, provide food for thought if you can, and hope for the other person to eventually find their way to the truth.
Some GPL projects do it. If you find someone infringing, it's easier to sue them if you have one copywrite holder instead of 100.
Soon we'll be able to emacs the way the developers intended.
Drm on Steam is optional. It's up to the dev whether to include any or not.
However, if the game uses any steam features, like achievements, voice chat, leaderboards, etc., then those won't work without steam.
It doesn't. All the time you spent reading manuals and tweaking configs to get it to boot quicker does.
That's what I don't understand. China isn't a Communist state, not since the 90s. They gutted their social safety net, lowered taxes on the rich, privatized most of their economy and then sold all their industry to multinational corporations. They're farther from communism than the average EU country now, and about on par with the US.
Same with Russia. Russia is basically Galt's Gulch now, which is why a segment of the GOP love it so much. It's like he lemmygraders stopped paying attention around 1990 and think nothing has changed since then.
Which is weird, because far left communists are the absolute last people I would expect to support Russia or China.
You can friend me for a code if you don't have one yet. My username is Octorine.