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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: August 24th, 2023

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  • I tried doing a dual boot to Mint awhile back, I did the mint backup at the start like it suggests, changed some things, broke it, restored from the backup thinking it was great id already made one, and broke the WHOLE pc.

    I had to pull the battery on the BIOS to get it to go beyond a black screen when turning on.

    It was terrible.

    It seem to recall at the time recommendations about not doing dual boot, and if you wanted to dual boot, remove the main OS drive when you install Linux. Then put it back in.





  • There has been yes, but it doesn’t mean it’s the right ruling law. The law varies on that by jurisdiction as well because it is a murky area.

    Edit: in the USA it might not even be illegal unless there was intent to distribute

    By the statute’s own terms, the law does not make all fictional child pornography illegal, only that found to be obscene or lacking in serious value. The mere possession of said images is not a violation of the law unless it can be proven that they were transmitted through a common carrier, such as the mail or the Internet, transported across state lines, or of an amount that showed intent to distribute.[

    So local AI generating fictional material that is not distributed may be okay federally in the USA.





  • No one cares if you leave a ticket open due to a bug or incomplete feature

    Product sure as hell cares if you’re going to ship a bug or incomplete feature.

    Never worked at company that wasn’t the case in over 15 years.

    Product owns the work they ask us to do. We do their bidding.

    And we certainly aren’t allowed to just change the scope of tickets at our own discretion without checking in





  • This is my typical experience as well, too many people don’t do a code review of their own PR first.

    When I was a junior, I had this coworker who did all my reviews. I was doing my absolute best and wanted to show that I was learning, so I would review all my work before submitting it and think, how would he review and respond to this code.

    That just stuck with me and it’s my normal practice now.

    I eventually learned that’s not as normal as I thought. I also tend to give better code reviews than others.

    Edit: the other thing I do is check in with who will be reviewing my code well before I submit anything someone might think is weird and have a discussion about it before the reveiw. If it’s weird, there might be a better way unless were stuck due to technical debt or something, and doing that early vs at the end usually saves time.





  • You can try Kotlin Compose Multiplatform.

    It can target JVM (windows, Linux, Mac) and then work on iOS and Android.

    Android and JVM are stable. IOS is alpha and works well. Should be beta this year.

    WASM support is coming as well but is experimental.

    You can do as much multiplatform as you want and do as much platform specific as you want.

    Compose itself is a declarative UI framework. Your UI is code.

    Edit: You do require a Windows, Linux, and Mac machine to build the executables for each desktop JVM app, as well as a Mac for an iOS app. Android you can build on any of them.