![](/static/66c60d9f/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/1df05a77-c6dd-4662-9ea3-62a24ca9a25f.jpeg)
Obviously BIO stands for Biography Iography Ography
Obviously BIO stands for Biography Iography Ography
Link to video?
Reason #2720183 to use Linux.
This, I pay for most stuff. But I pirate stuff I’m not sure about
Love, when the convention ended
Best he can do is a thumbs up, no eye contact
Not a dog person, but I’ve always found it endearing when you can see their tiny row of bottom teeth 😀
Festering pit of misinformation it is. And yes, they’ll ban you for calling it out or correcting the record.
Don’t ever be ashamed for asking to know more
Rust compiles to machine code like C.
Just like you can call binaries written in C from Python and return their result, you can also run binaries written in Rust. In fact, there are helper libraries to provide some syntax to do this.
Python and Rust apparently pair nicely
Should have explained my viewpoint. Most startups should not do micro services.
Using linting to prevent coupling between modules can give you some of the benefits of micro services without going all in.
Someone in the thread mentioned that to get the benefits of micro services in a monolith, you can use a linting rule to prevent dependencies across modules
Share data, not state.
In Rust this is a pretty good use-case for channels, which can be used to send messages across threads.
I agree with you, but it’s just not ready for the average person.
Case in point: regardless of which version of Steam I install it goes into a crash-restart cycle if I open it from gnome. The only way to run it is to type “steam” in the console.
The issue persists regardless of whether I use the .deb or flatpak.
No, they are right.
It took an enormous amount of fiddling for me to get games working on Debian 12
Coincidence. An ongoing trend of humanity being more and more unlucky, that’s all.
Pork bun
Not funny dad 🙄
(I love it)
I’m an atheist and this is a dumb take
Short X 📉