It’s also ridiculous to think it’s still the same language that was built in two weeks, like absolutely no work was done in it over time.
It’s also ridiculous to think it’s still the same language that was built in two weeks, like absolutely no work was done in it over time.
Found the gnome developer
And there’s NeoWin again with the Windows 12 clickbaits. This “leak” is just Windows 11 IoT Enterprise Subscription, and there’s absolutely nothing nowhere that even mentions the number 12.
This one really got a laugh out of me
Pretty much. Their benchmarks seem to be VERY cherry picked to skew things in their favour, specially the testing framework part, where bun compares its speed to one of the slowest testing frameworks out there (jest) and claim victory.
I’m very glad that this guy actually made benchmarks instead of just reading what’s on bun’s site before posting a video about it.
I don’t understand it either.
I’ve only had issues with npm speeds when the projects were stored in a HDD, and that’s not node’s fault.
The very first phrase of the article talks about open source investigative techniques, not about open source software, both are very different things.
I always disliked Gnome because of this and also because it seems like the developers want to force their tastes and use cases to everyone else. You either learn to work their way, or move out. That’s one of the many things I like about KDE, despite the devs having their preferred default way of doing things, they leave options for the users to decide in an easy way (i.e. having everything in the settings menu, without needing to download and install a separate program or manually editing config files)
That’s pretty much how MacOS does, but I wouldn’t call Mac’s window management good by any means.
I think the main problem with GIMP is that it was made by developers with developers in mind, completely ignoring how digital artists work. Like it or not, everybody has to take pages from Photoshop (and co.) like how Affinity and Krita are doing, otherwise there’s really no incentive to completely change your workflow.