# I am the Watcher. I am your guide through this vast new twtiverse.
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@prologic interesting that ruby is so low on the list, i find it the easiest to learn! hell i struggle with python more than ruby and i've been told that python is like ruby but better lol. maybe it's just my weird brain!
@prologic interesting that ruby is so low on the list, i find it the easiest to learn! hell i struggle with python more than ruby and i've been told that python is like ruby but better lol. maybe it's just my weird brain!
Objectivos 🤡 #balatro Mensagens no Telegram: - até que ponto pode o Ricardo ser responsabilizado pelas horas que tenho perdido com o Balatro... - Eu devia receber comissões do developer à pala das vidas que já destruí
Objectivos 🤡 #balatro Mensagens no Telegram: - até que ponto pode o Ricardo ser responsabilizado pelas horas que tenho perdido com o Balatro... - Eu devia receber comissões do developer à pala das vidas que já destruí
@kat Ah, I see. I would assume that you’ll get used to it at some point. 🤔 But yeah, a lot of meaning is packed into these symbols. (It’s much, much worse with languages like Rust. 😅)
@movq i feel like when i read go code i'm reading some algebra shit where every part is 1-5 letters long and then there's weird symbols like := and it's just infinitely harder for me to parse and infer meaning from lol. it's such a me problem
@movq i feel like when i read go code i'm reading some algebra shit where every part is 1-5 letters long and then there's weird symbols like := and it's just infinitely harder for me to parse and infer meaning from lol. it's such a me problem
i wish it was realistic for me to learn golang but every single time i try to comprehend any go code i'm like What the fuck am i looking at. why is all of this so short and condensed GIVE ME VERBOSE CODE
i wish it was realistic for me to learn golang but every single time i try to comprehend any go code i'm like What the fuck am i looking at. why is all of this so short and condensed GIVE ME VERBOSE CODE
A @aiscarvalho e eu viemos ao sul para falar de texto e design no Algarve Design Meeting; entre outras aventuras vamos tb abordar o @PureDeNoticias Cartaz do Algarve Design Meeting com fotos e nomes dos oradores
A @aiscarvalho e eu viemos ao sul para falar de texto e design no Algarve Design Meeting; entre outras aventuras vamos tb abordar o @PureDeNoticias Cartaz do Algarve Design Meeting com fotos e nomes dos oradores
"A coalition of determined open-source software (OSS) advocates and a handful of technology experts working in the European Commission set out in 2004 to end Microsoft's monopoly. They almost succeeded. This article reveals how they managed to change the EU's software policies, made Microsoft lobbyists work overtime - and in the end, and despite their best efforts, could not withstand the power of proprietary companies’ lobbying campaigns.
Drawing on the Multiple Streams Framework, the article explains the European Commission’s decision to promote OSS and open standards in 2004, and its puzzling decision to reverse course just a few years later, in 2010, despite its unchanged rhetoric about the benefits of openness. The analysis reveals three key factors that drove the changes in the EU’s policies.
In 2004, OSS advocates managed to frame the EU’s dependency on proprietary software as a problem – and the promotion of OSS and open standards as the solution.
In 2010, #Microsoft and other proprietary companies used their existing connections in Brussels to sow doubt about the maturity and cost of #OSS among #EU policymakers."
"A coalition of determined open-source software (OSS) advocates and a handful of technology experts working in the European Commission set out in 2004 to end Microsoft's monopoly. They almost succeeded. This article reveals how they managed to change the EU's software policies, made Microsoft lobbyists work overtime - and in the end, and despite their best efforts, could not withstand the power of proprietary companies’ lobbying campaigns.
Drawing on the Multiple Streams Framework, the article explains the European Commission’s decision to promote OSS and open standards in 2004, and its puzzling decision to reverse course just a few years later, in 2010, despite its unchanged rhetoric about the benefits of openness. The analysis reveals three key factors that drove the changes in the EU’s policies.
In 2004, OSS advocates managed to frame the EU’s dependency on proprietary software as a problem – and the promotion of OSS and open standards as the solution.
In 2010, #Microsoft and other proprietary companies used their existing connections in Brussels to sow doubt about the maturity and cost of #OSS among #EU policymakers."
E que tal este hino anti-pirataria de 2010s, cantado pelo Magalhães (sim, o computador) numa versão do Chamem a Polícia? Juro que é ainda melhor do que a descrição dá a entender, ouve!
(se o áudio não der depois de carregar no play, experimenta clicar em "descarregar ficheiro" ali em baixo à direita)
E que tal este hino anti-pirataria de 2010s, cantado pelo Magalhães (sim, o computador) numa versão do Chamem a Polícia? Juro que é ainda melhor do que a descrição dá a entender, ouve!
(se o áudio não der depois de carregar no play, experimenta clicar em "descarregar ficheiro" ali em baixo à direita)