Average Linux enjoyer:
Also I devours shows from #lateNightLinux and #coolZoneMedia
#AntennaPodEcho #podcast #securityNow #linuxUnplugged #techOverTea #mimirOgMarsdal #twit
Average Linux enjoyer:
Also I devours shows from #lateNightLinux and #coolZoneMedia
#AntennaPodEcho #podcast #securityNow #linuxUnplugged #techOverTea #mimirOgMarsdal #twit
Tech over Tea episode #300 - @BrodieOnLinux has interviewed me!
Everything about OpenPrinting, history, what we are doing, funding and the future, …
As usual with Tech over Tea, there is the full 2-hour episode, plus 6 highlight clips taken from it.
Here is my OpenPrinting News post about it:
https://openprinting.github.io/OpenPrinting-News-Tech-over-Tea-300-Brodie-interviews-Till-Kamppeter/
I Was Featured On Tech Over Tea #156
Hey lookie! I'm back on @BrodieOnLinux podcast #TechOverTea again!!!
all these are structural quality issues, I hope you don't stumble upon a lot.
The CLI is nice, for search and more use "nh". But it is veery verbose, I thought of that when listening to your #TechOverTea episode. It should have a less verbose mode
@ngn Thanks for elaborating on this topic.
Im still not sure about #fedora being testing ground for #rhel, they surely have really formal way of introducing and documenting changes with their change proposals https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/program_management/changes_guide/ which to my knowledge from one of episodes of #techovertea by @BrodieOnLinux are later reviewed by #rhel and merged/notmerged into it. Some people asked about #fedora and #rhel relationship in the past https://discussion.fedoraproject.org/t/request-for-a-detailed-breakdown-of-the-relationship-between-fedora-and-red-hat/86775
For the source code availability, even with #gpl #license you are only required to share the source code to the recipients of the application/whatever you are distributing/selling, just because most #gitforge services allow everyone to view the projects stored on their servers, it doesn't mean it has to be like that - though, for open development process, maybe it should be? But that doesn't change that if #redhat called their #downstream #distro "freeloaders", its really rude.
They are doing it for profit, I guess. Not caring about their potential customers will get them eventually. But besides that, everyone has to earn money somehow, and having #foss product doesn't make it easy.
> best you can do is to put new tech and software into your repos, and encourage users to test and use it, which is what most rolling distros do
I disagree, although its good to have unstable features as opt-in, it introduces bias where the new features are only used by people that know about them, and know how to enable/switch to them. This way, you are severely reducing amount of useful bug reports that are crucial to know what are your users even doing.
Ideally you would perform AB tests, with ever increasing number of real users, and in case of issues you would simply #rollback the update to the latest stable version. Sadly, it would require that rollback feature, and prefill all system information in the bug report.
Am back on @BrodieOnLinux #TechOverTea podcast
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the latest conversation of @BrodieOnLinux and the #Futo guy on the #TechOverTea podcast was quite interesting.
What I found strange is how they separate licenses by being #OpenSource or #FreeSoftware. AFAIK, most popular licenses like GPL, MIT, BSD, MPL, etc. conform to both the #FSF and the #OSI standards. I guess what they meant was #CopyLeft vs permissive licenses?