firelizzard

joined 2 years ago
[–] firelizzard@programming.dev 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Saying the chance of something going sideways is smaller than on Windows isn’t saying much. I’ll pick a distro that’s stable by default, TYVM.

[–] firelizzard@programming.dev 2 points 6 months ago

Your options are:

  1. Go back to logging in
  2. Remove the password from kwallet
  3. Store the password on disk somewhere so it can be auto unlocked

AFAIK there are no other options

[–] firelizzard@programming.dev 1 points 6 months ago

When yarn/react/next.js/amplify breaks in some new and idiotic way, Claude is helpful more often than not. Why spend hours googling and sifting through github/stack overflow/etc when Claude can tell me what option to tweak to fix it in a fraction of the time?

[–] firelizzard@programming.dev 1 points 6 months ago

Boring, tedious shit that doesn’t require brainpower, just time, when fixing whatever comes out of the LLM is less annoying than doing it myself.

[–] firelizzard@programming.dev 1 points 6 months ago (1 children)

If every possible action is going to piss off a large portion of the user base, doing nothing is the sanest option IMO.

[–] firelizzard@programming.dev 3 points 6 months ago

They weren’t looking for universal approval. They were looking for widespread/majority approval.

[–] firelizzard@programming.dev 2 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (3 children)

So you think they should have picked a solution that pissed off a large portion of the user base, just so they could say they “solved” it? The entire problem is that they tried, repeatedly, and none of their proposals had wide support.

[–] firelizzard@programming.dev 18 points 6 months ago (1 children)

How is that relevant to “That’s on you for using Java”?

[–] firelizzard@programming.dev 2 points 6 months ago

It sounds like you already know how to do embedded programming, at least at the hobby level. For someone who’s new to that, Arduino IDE is the easiest learning curve I know of. As far as which boards to use, I have no specific feelings which is why I said Arduino or equivalent.

[–] firelizzard@programming.dev 10 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (4 children)

You need to understand how code actually works. If you’ve only worked with highly abstracted languages like Python, Ruby, JavaScript, etc then you should probably start by learning lower level languages like C or C++. Or maybe Rust and Go but they’re kind of low level and abstracted at the same time. If you already know C/C++ then buy yourself an Arduino (or equivalent) and start screwing around. If you’re in school and interested in this as a career, take some electrical engineering or digital circuit design classes.

[–] firelizzard@programming.dev 30 points 7 months ago

It is possible to sign a flatpak, but yeah distributors need to actually do that and flathub should require published flatpaks to be signed.

[–] firelizzard@programming.dev 22 points 7 months ago (2 children)

VSCode is the first development environment I’ve used that doesn’t make me feel like this. It’s not perfect but the base application is rock solid and the full DE experience is the more reliable than any other DE I’ve used.

P.S. I specifically said DE for those people who say VSCode isn’t an IDE. Personally I don’t see the point in differentiating.

P.P.S. Sublime is not a DE in my opinion. It’s an excellent text editor with syntax highlighting. The plugins were an afterthought and it was never intended to provide the full experience. Granted I haven’t used it in years.

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