pew also seems like it’s only a venv manager, rather than a complete packaging system with dependency management, build scripts, and helpers. and it hasn’t been updated in five years.
pew also seems like it’s only a venv manager, rather than a complete packaging system with dependency management, build scripts, and helpers. and it hasn’t been updated in five years.
…like the js infra stuff isn’t it’s own special nightmare?
wait hang on, what? source on that?
excel has python support now! you may still get away with it
I’d prefer an organized movement to nationalize Amazon.
oh yeah they separated it out didn’t they. last time i hacked on it, minetest game was partly implemented in the core in c++.
i didn’t want to use roblox as an example as luanti is more focused on a single typ of game, and is playable in and of itself. gmod’s sandbox is akin to the default sandbox in luanti, basically a creative mode.
also i didn’t want to imply that luanti has child exploitation…
from my limited experience with it, i think this is sort of the “wrong question”. Luanti is basically to Minecraft as Garry’s Mod is to Half-Life 2 (except not really, since it’s not the same engine). It’s basically a platform at this point, with the base mechanics of Minecraft available as components for you to build your own game with. there are many different games available, and many of those games have their own mods.
there’s some automation-focused stuff in their browser but since mindshare is much smaller they are not as finished or polished. however, since there is an official modding API this time, you never know…
with proper application of sisu, it will open in both directions
wordpress runs like 45% of the web. that’s a big lunch
lots of plastic straws. not of my own accord, a friend i was out with just kept shoving them into our pockets because she was annoyed at only being able to buy paper straws at the store.
but mozilla wouldn’t want any telemetry from a fork. it would mess with their data. if mozilla is on the other end they’re likely just looking at the user agent and then throwing it away.
…wait, that doesn’t make any sense. why would they send stuff there?
who hosts the site that receives the telemetry from iceraven?
so it calls moz? or have they changed it to their own endpoint?
does that apply to iceraven? if not i don’t really see the relevance
they are probably also smart enough to know how to toggle the telemetry off with the setting exposed by the browser.
ok but like… telemetry is not automatically bad. a vast majority of users never report bugs in software, and are trained to just click through popups. this means the bugs don’t get fixed, and the crash reports don’t get sent.
scrutinizing what actually gets sent from your browser is how you keep yourself safe, blocking all telemetry is how you get unpatched security holes.
isn’t the CDU Merkel’s party? not really a fringe group.