I wanted to play around with a project that uses Nix… it seemed really cool but I couldn’t get it working, I guess I was throwing myself in at the deep end with it
It looks like a fantastic way of sharing a dev environment across a team
I wanted to play around with a project that uses Nix… it seemed really cool but I couldn’t get it working, I guess I was throwing myself in at the deep end with it
It looks like a fantastic way of sharing a dev environment across a team
Something tells me their rating of “poor” isn’t based on actual demand
Must be a pretty small segment of the market that wants this much technology in a vacuum but won’t just buy a Roomba
I do this with a USB relay, it doesn’t use any radio communication but the downside is it requires some rewiring
Go away kitten
I’m using that!
With a Linux box and the lirc program, you can do it with a leftover number pad. Then you get … more than 10 buttons!
They should care! It could be a source of selection pressure
They need a cow bell
I think when most people talk about “processed food”, they’re referring to ultra-processed food, and just grinding beef would not be enough to classify it as an ultra-processed food
Reading this made me a bit sad.
On the one hand, I understand how tools like this could be a hurdle for someone who isn’t heavily invested in their use. And on the other, as someone who has tinkered with open source projects, I know that as hurdles go, git is the first of very many hurdles that must be cleared when contributing to a large, mature GUI program like this, and it’s a pretty low one at that.
It would be great if more people could contribute to and help develop open-source versions of tools they themselves use, but I can certainly see how tough it can be starting out