@pojntfx it’s pretty handy! i’m not a fan of gha in general but it’s free and this view is at least satisfying once all the little dots turn green.
️
i am not a devops, though. i’m very glad this phase is over. haha
@pojntfx it’s pretty handy! i’m not a fan of gha in general but it’s free and this view is at least satisfying once all the little dots turn green.
️
i am not a devops, though. i’m very glad this phase is over. haha
@sgued yeah… i can scoop the dog poop off my lawn. i just wish it wasn’t there in the first place. 
look a this beautiful crap! i don't even like this stuff!

praise be.

"please let this be the one... they took away all my sres, devops nerds, AND sysadmins. i just want to go to bed."
he whispers into the cold, unloving void
i'm not sure *how* but i guess all the hubbub about the new ceo didn't seem "real"? this caught me off guard
thankfully the other box is debian stable and by the time forky is released the industry will be over this garbage 

@jcoglan ubuntu jumped the shark quite a while ago, tbh, with the whole "ubuntu pro" thing. it still has a place in my heart, but.
i've been on debian trixie since the summer and it's remarkably nice. similar stable release schedule as lts ubuntu now (every 2 years). fedora is also fine if you want bi-annual.
jamie brandon once suggested the term "over-the-wall open source" to me, long before slop patches were a thing. i liked the idea then & i like it now.
when 98% of open source projects consist of one or two dedicated hackers anyway, maybe the "community" of open contrib is optional.
just a thought.
this "delete" button (required to delete a build and upload a new one, if your app is rejected on review) only shows up on-hover.
why. WHY. the only way to know it's there is to already know it's there.
apple, if i wanted to solve hidden blocks puzzles, i'd play zelda.
@pabloyoyoista every week that passes beyond mid-2025 i am increasingly grateful for the work you did while you were a director, pablo.
the hardest work is often the least-gratifying. people will mistake your intentions. (i know i did.) and, as is so often the case, you aren’t there to be a part of the positive results your initiatives started.
but your selfless effort moved the gnome foundation forward in ways it would have struggled to do without your time there. i know it was exasperating. but it’s still moving forward and you were there to give it one of the many pushes it needed, in spite of all the stop energy.
“hobby”, indeed. 