Let’s just say that ME deserved its “Mistake Edition” moniker
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Linux@programming.dev•Rust Coreutils 0.5 Released - Inching Toward Full GNU Compatibility
51·11 days agoYeah, the usual argument for not picking GPL with Rust is based on how it applies to static linking, which is how Rust works by default. But the coreutils are executables, not libraries.
Even for the libraries I think it’d be nice with some stronger guarantees. Allegedly the EUPL is copyleft but allows static linking, so probably something to look into.
Ah well. At least it’s also possible for orgs like GNU to re-release forks of MIT stuff as GPL. The MIT licensing doesn’t only work for the proprietary-preferring orgs.
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Fuck Cars@lemmy.world•My city started rolling out electric busesEnglish
652·1 month agoWe have nearly all electric buses here in Oslo now, and whenever I wind up on a diesel bus I think I’m going to get hearing damage
Electric buses are far from silent, but WOW the amount of noise and stink we’ve just been tolerating with fossil fuels is insane. Even absent climate change, that’d be worth switching to electric vehicles.
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Linux@lemmy.ml•Is the FOSS world in danger of a corporate takeover, thanks to pushover licenses?
3·1 month agoYeah, Ubuntu actually isn’t the first distro without GNU coreutils. Beyond Android and Busybox, there’s also stuff like Talos, which is something like … Kubernetes/Linux.
IME something like Kubernetes/Linux running “distroless” containers have a huge potential to displace traditional GNU/Linux in the server market, and I wouldn’t be surprised if someone manages to build a desktop out of it, either.
Depends on culture and level of education. For someone who comes from a culture where we use decimals, I’d interpret this in the math/physics class way, i.e. 10.
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Fuck Cars@lemmy.world•Plug-in hybrids pollute almost as much as petrol cars, report finds - Analysis of 800,000 European cars found real-world pollution from plug-in hybrids nearly five times greater than lab testsEnglish
11·2 months agoYeah, their real world usage has a huge variance. My parents had one for like a decade and almost never filled it with gas, almost only drove it as an EV. But when they bought it, the previous owner had apparently used it as a pure petrol car … and the petrol engine had terrible efficiency.
esa@discuss.tchncs.deOPto
Linux@programming.dev•Canonical releases Ubuntu 25.10 Questing Quokka
111·3 months agoThis seems to be a pretty experimental release to test some new stuff before the next LTS is scheduled to drop in April.
I’ve actually been running sudo-rs on my machines since the last CVE in plain sudo and it seems to do what I want, at least.
But expecting some smoke for this smoke test release :)
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Linux@programming.dev•What's your "I switched to Linux because..." Story?
4·3 months agoBecause Windows ME really deserved the “Mistake Edition” moniker, and I already knew some people running Linux.
It’s pretty common in the far north as well apparently, with some people claiming people are willing to drive for several hours just for a party.
In the central east, people generally aren’t willing to spend all day in a car. A couple of hours drive is acceptable, but once you’re at ~5 hours we generally expect to spend the night there. And to not leave at 0600 in the morning:)
As a bonus, some of those mountain passes can be a bit finicky, so they’re often good to … not plan very optimistically.
Yeah, we frequently get them in Norway. People who want a weekend trip to Oslo and drive to “the fjords” and back one day, or see stuff after 1500 in winter.
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Linux@lemmy.ml•df showing a full (99%) ssd, but du only showing a fraction of that? UPDATED
9·3 months agoOne more puzzle piece here is that
duwon’t report on files that have been marked for deletion but are still held on to by some process. There’s anlsofincantation to list those, but I can’t recall it off the top of my head.It used to be part of sysadmin work to detect the processes that held on to large files if
dfreports that you’re running out of space, and restart them to make them let go of the file. But I haven’t done that in ages. And if you restarted the host OS that should have taken care of that.I assume you also know how to prune container resources.
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Linux@programming.dev•GNU Coreutils 9.8 Released With New Features
2·3 months agouutils is still busy playing catch-up to gnu coreutils though, so unclear how much competition in terms of features they provide
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Linux@lemmy.ml•TIL tar keeps permissions of the files and directories archived if possible.
13·3 months agoIt’s even a tape archiving tool. Just pretty much nobody uses it in the original way any more.
Very much one of those “if it ain’t broke, don’t replace it” tools.
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Linux@lemmy.ml•I must have died and gone to heaven [nushell]English
10·3 months agoYeah, there should be a clear separation between scripts, which should have a shebang, and interactive use.
If a script starts acting oddly after someone does a
chsh, then that script is broken. Hopefully people don’t actually distribute broken script files that have some implicit dependency on an unspecified interpreter in this day and age.
That’s interesting I hadn’t thought about the JSON angle! Do you mean that you can actually use
jqon regular command outputs likels -l?No, you need to be using a tool which has json output as an option. These are becoming more common, but I think still rare among the GNU coreutils.
lsoutput especially is unparseable, as in, there are tons of resources telling people not to do it because it’s pretty much guaranteed to break.
I’ve been using fish (with starship for prompt) for like a year I think, after having had a self-built zsh setup for … I don’t know how long.
I’m capable of using
awkbut in a very simple way; I generally prefer being able to usejq. IMO both awk and perl are sort of remnants of the age before JSON became the standard text-based structured data format. We used to have to write a lot of dinky little regex-based parsers in Perl to extract data. These days we likely get JSON and can operate on actual data structures.I tried
nuvery briefly but I’m just too used to POSIX-ish shells to bother switching to another model. For scripting I’ll usewithset -eou pipefailbut very quickly switch to Python if it looks like it’s going to have any sort of serious logic.My impression is that there’s likely more of us that’d like a less wibbly-wobbly, better shell language for scripting purposes, but that efforts into designing such a language very quickly goes in the direction of nu and oil and whatnot.
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Europe@feddit.org•In Trade Deal With Trump, Europe Sells Out its PedestriansEnglish
8·3 months agoDepends on what’s actually in the trade deal.
But yeah, hopefully we can tax the yank tanks out of Europe if we can’t ban them outright.
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World News@lemmy.world•Meet the water sommeliers: they believe H₂O can rival wine – but would you pay £19 a bottle?English
3·4 months agolaughs in norwegian




I work at a Linux-dominant shop. Macs are somewhat common. People with Windows are kind of seen as weirdos.
We don’t use office packages all that much either; more geared towards markdown and git and programming languages. The office package I use the most is Google’s.
I haven’t had a machine with windows on it since Windows ME. I do have some training in windows server from over a decade ago (nearing two maybe?), but I’ve never used the knowledge.