emacs org-mode meets all of these criteria
I appreciate you being the 1/8 to actually state their reason!
Everything seemed pretty self-explanatory to me in a community like this since:
- Videogame critiques on youtube are quite popular (and have been for years)
- Joseph Anderson is one of the most popular video game critics. His (second!) Fallout 4 critique has 10+ million views
- Lies of P is a very popular game which came out this year, and souls-likes in general are very popular games which people love to talk about
Also I wholehartedly disagree with downvoting something as spam when you have no idea what it is. And why do you need me to tell you what "we're" doing here? It's not for me to say whether this is a thread for roasting the game or praising it or anything else. I'm not sure I could even think of a more clear, straightforward title (and it's simply the video title).
I also don't feel it's my obligation to share my thoughts on something I post. As OP I prefer for people to think for themselves and form their own opinion about the content.
Yeah is there some specific reason that I'm missing? I've never posted something like this before anywhere on lemmy.
That sounds roughly correct, though I don't see the connection with the article? Unless you're saying that "products" (like Signal) will always exist, which is probably true but is orthogonal to whether or not other models will succeed.
As for email, I think posteo does a pretty good job, but you're right options are few and far between. But self hosting email is just as viable as ever? Perhaps less so since e.g. gmail will instantly flag your incoming mail as spam if you're sending it from randomsite.tld, but honestly that issue hasn't gotten that bad (yet). Yes, whenever there's a protocol like email or xmpp, companies will create gmails and signals and turn them into walled gardens, but that doesn't spoil the protocol for everyone else. It just causes frustration that companies build closed products on top of open technologies, but not much to be done about that.
Yep! If you're applying and need a non-trivial number of locations checked/maps generated, you can check out the prgoram here.
Note that it says you can install it with guix, but it hasn't actually been merged into master yet, so for now you do need sbcl and the dependencies (etiher via quicklisp or however else you snag them).
I don't think it's a coincidence that cloud tech, container tech, Go, and Plan 9 tend to overlap conceptually and demographically.
nice
I've never used Arch or Nix, but I switched from Void -> Guix and have been very happy with it. It's such a huge peace of mind to be able to have your whole system declaratively configured, package changes being atomic and generational (rollbacks so no worries about breakage), Guix shell for messing about, and being able to make your system do anything you can write in Scheme.
That's my daily driver. On servers so far I've gone with Debian Stable + Guix.
Also Void is still a fantastic distro, and is what I would use if not for Guix/Nix.
lol glad to see you here on lemmy too, keep up the good and enthusiastic work :)
I understand the general job market, but what about lisp prevents you from pursuing personal ventures with it?