> GitHub, by contrast, grew out of the free software movement, which had similar global ambitions to Microsoft. The confused ideology behind it, a mixture of Rousseau with Ayn Rand, held both that humans are naturally good and that selfishness works out for the best. Thus, if only coders would write and give away the code they were interested in, the results would solve everyone else’s problems. This was also astonishingly successful. The internet now depends on free software.
@resist_berlin@cypnk I often watch Die Sendung mit der Maus both to practise my German and for the technical/aesthetic quality of the Sachgeschichten - Armin still uses Arriflex 16mm cameras for his segments (especially the slow motion footage), but digital editing (hence no scratches/dust on the film) whereas Christoph uses digital equipment throughout (I noticed this on a behind the scenes doku)..
Another decision that made GS the bad guy was the initial resistance to separating out local from federated timelines, which led to a shitload of mastodon people thinking they were being invaded by GS people. We literally could not get out of Mastodon people's faces if we wanted to, because of Mastodon's design. Not seeing the boundaries between servers didn't change the fact that some people were just assholes, but at least separating them reduced perceived turf wars. The NIMBY effect was in part because of this too.
The last thing I'll mention is that the "new" GS servers when they showed up got into conflict with most of the existing GS servers. Those servers banned people, silenced and sandboxed users on remote instances. Once those boundaries were set, relations between the servers cooled down into a live and let live attitude. Many Mastodon servers have been far more aggressive, engaging in organized slander campaigns against servers and individuals.
This note is in response to Trev's note, which I mostly agree with and consider my perception of events above supplementary to.
@cwebber I have the issue with it wanting to recompile things (and have a really dirty workaround for it), but that's because I'm doing the multiple installation scope thing and it's bad at finding the already compiled files, but you're just doing the normal raco pkg install thing to user scope, so I don't get why it's making trouble.
@cwebber A user-install, just raco pkg install gregor-lib, works without issues on NixOS. But you did have some things in your ~/.racket that you successfully installed there? Gregor is the first thing that makes trouble?
@cwebber Issue #143 is solved, and with another small fix gregor-lib now Just Builds with racket2nix, which is on the one hand nice, but on the other hand doesn't help you solve your problem.
When I'm back in Hong Kong and have a more powerful computer, I will have a look at reproducing your issue in guix.
Adding some manual exceptions to look in the new location. Luckily it was easy to find, with retained user name and repo names. And I think it's just that one person (so far).
@cwebber @deadsuperhero Yeah, no, they're not. But as Mastodon frontends they are still part of the set of faces of the AP Fediverse. They don't belong in a formal AP guide, but in an introduction to what you can do on the network, I think they're relevant, as well as the various Mastodon- and Pleroma-compatible mobile apps.