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Comment Re:Inkscape is awesome... but... (Score 2) 134

I love Inkscape and want to use it, but as long as there is no proper CMYK / printing support it's pretty useless for profession work.

What the fuck is it with design people acting like their profession is the only one there is?

There's a whole world of professional work to be done for design on the web, in mobile apps, etc that doesn't need CMYK.

Comment Re:libressl-2.1.3 (Score 2) 97

OpenSSL remains the only portable SSL library that can be used by both open source and commercial developers alike

Kind of. Its license actually isn't compatible with the GPL, so there's a whole lot of Free Software developers that can't use it.

Comment Re:Being nice is why business is a clusterfsck (Score 1) 361

When Person A comes to you and asks for your opinion/feedback on person X (which they are considering hiring), you are not allowed to say person X suck

I think you misunderstood what you were told. Or they misunderstood something themselves. What you described is not true.

I'm mostly certain that what someone along the line was trying to describe was that if person X is applying for a job, and you contact their former employers to verify their work history, the former employers are only allowed to confirm or deny your employment. They cannot be used as references. If they give you any kind of feedback on person X other than confirming work history, they could be sued for doing so. That is why work history is listed separately from references.

Comment Re:I agree with Lennart (Score 1) 551

Some of them are templates that systemd uses to creat temporary conffig files at boot time!

I'm familiar with those. They're much better than what we used to have. In the old system, there was either a mountain of repeated code with minor differences, or there were templates that were modified with sed to create individual configuration files.

Maintaining the templates is far easier.

Comment Re:Just keep it away from Gentoo and I'm good (Score 1) 551

Systemd is a tool, not just a project. Systemd as a tool tries to do many different things

You are misinformed. Systemd is a project which provides a collection of tools. One of them handles daemon and system startup. One of them handles logging. One of them handles device node creation. One of them handles firewall rule management. etc.

Systemd is quite UNIX-y.

Comment Re:I agree with Lennart (Score 2, Informative) 551

I also like how he calls systemd non-monolithic, of course, without giving any reason for why that is.

And that seems to be one of the big differences between people who like systemd and people who don't.

People who actually took the time to look at systemd more often like the design, and understand that the one project consists of many small tools.

Then there's a community of people who rely entirely on hearsay. They don't like systemd, but almost all of the things they don't like about it aren't true. In this case, believing that PID 1 is a process that does daemon handling, and logging, and firewall rule handling, and DNS, and device node handling, and...

Those things are not handled by the same process. It's non-monolithic. It's small tools doing individual, well defined jobs.

Comment Re:A few answers from the original AC (Score 1) 403

Because it contradicts the Unix philosophy of having a lot of little utilities that each do one thing

systemd is actually a lot of little utilities that each do one thing. If you don't know that, you're probably getting your information from biased sources.

Although the signal to noise ratio on here sometimes approaches zero, there is the occasional informed opinion

You're welcome.

Comment Re:owners of older machines, behold... (Score 5, Interesting) 177

Firefox is also a smaller download, a smaller install, starts faster, runs JavaScript faster, allows plugins on the mobile version, and allows users to run their own sync server, compared with Chrome.

Mozilla's work is really shining these days. Firefox is a better browser by every metric I can think of.

Comment Re:Makes sense. (Score 1) 629

...which is basically the only valid criticism in this entire thread. Google made one phone whose support ended too soon, mostly because the SoC vendor essentially went tits up.

Which is an excellent example for why Free Software matters at all levels of the stack, including firmware. Too many people fail to take that seriously.

Comment Re:Google's official support policy (Score 1) 629

Google's support policy is no such thing, but Google only sets the policy for the hardware that they sell.

I seriously cannot understand how naive this conversation is. If you buy a product from Company X, you are exchanging money for goods and services from Company X. It is their responsibility to provide you with goods and services.

It is not Google's responsibility to do the development, testing, and support for hardware from Company X for which they were not paid.

Google supports their phones for a very reasonable amount of time. If you want support, I suggest you buy one.

Comment Re:Makes sense. (Score 2, Insightful) 629

If my phone is running Android OS, then I should be able to get updates straight from Google.

If that's what you want, then BUY A PHONE FROM GOOGLE.

Otherwise, you're expecting Google to provide the development and support for hardware they didn't sell. Your money goes to company X, but you expect Google to do the work? That's not how any economic system works. You made an exchange of money for goods with company X. Warranty, support, etc is their responsibility. They're the one that you're paying.

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