Where are the warnings? If they’re in some particular magazine that maybe not every user is subscribed to, then this is a bad practice.
Computers are neat. Burritos are good.
Where are the warnings? If they’re in some particular magazine that maybe not every user is subscribed to, then this is a bad practice.
I’m not one to knock a developer on their software. Making things like kbin are complex and they certainly take effort to maintain and improve. That being said, these are my complaints about the management of kbin:
Why is there hardly ever any feedback from Ernest about why kbin is down? It just comes back up and that’s the end of it, until the next outage. A link to an explanation, or detailed banner message, or a schedule would be nice, assuming that these outages are scheduled.
Why has Ernest insisted on being the only developer to work on this? This creates a potential “single point of failure” situation.
None of the git issues on Codeberg seem to get triaged or responded to.
Ernest rarely responds to DMs on kbin.
At this point, I think I’m just going to create an alternate Lemmy account to avoid these blackouts.
Aww that’s cute, they’re trying to be big boy computers now
Companies being held responsible for things? Lol
XML it is!
I prefer YAML please
The line is going up. My sources tell me this is good.
I’m not self hosting an instance, but kbin is super fucking broken lately and it’s getting really frustrating. It’s been about a week. I submitted a ticket in their Git repo, but no response.
I just discovered this and it’s awesome, if you’re into gaming at all. It’s a containerized console emulator suite, and I think it is very well done. https://github.com/linuxserver/docker-emulatorjs
Spicy? No, it’s just a bunch of garbage “food”
Fair enough, but Taco Bell will give you squirts that resemble Jupiter.
Mostly good for shopping and going to restaurants
Pfsense, Bitwarden, NAS running Debian, Kubernetes cluster. I have plans to expand And add more services when I get some of my newer hardware online.
Did they license the code?
Is there a clause in your employment agreement about the company owning anything you create? IBM does this, and it’s total bullshit.
Webdings.
“I don’t need to comment this code, I wrote it so I know what it does”
And then
“Fuck, I should’ve commented this code, I have no idea what it does”
Comment. A lot.
Cool, and I respect that. And I respect Ernest for what he does and he doesn’t owe anyone anything at all. But if you open source a thing and then almost completely ignore your user base, it’s just a bit disappointing.