- Joined
- Sep 10, 2021
You'll have to ask him, he's the one that posted a video about NetBSD rejecting Rust a few days after it was posted in this thread.Why? the General Antisemitism Thread is much better for that.
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You'll have to ask him, he's the one that posted a video about NetBSD rejecting Rust a few days after it was posted in this thread.Why? the General Antisemitism Thread is much better for that.
He is one of the good jews.Lunduke follows this thread pretty closely for all our antisemitic jokes.
Doubtgood jews.
Going back and reading this now with the context of what your application is. It makes a lot of sense. I do think what you are working on by it's nature does make it one of the more difficult things to do within the framework that is wayland.I've personally needed to do 6 million hacks for my application to work on wayland as well, even with xwayland. And it still cant work properly and on some wayland compositors it cant work at all. It has to rely on undefined behaviors in each wayland compositor and also bypass wayland and access linux apis (sometimes with root access). If the application were to be a native wayland application it wouldn't work at all.
This is intentional in the wayland protocol. My application will never be able to work properly on wayland.
And the things they do try and get working are all done patchwork hacky quick fixes by whatever DEFor me wayland is so frustrating because it really doesn't seem to be held back by anything technical (even if you can point out technical flaws in how they chose to handle things), it's held back by the people working on it seemingly disregarding what people that are using it NOW want/need from their computer. Also all the politics shit they shove into it for no reason is really gay and annoying.
I know he is one of those people who really screams anti-semitism and he also had questionable ideas. Like supporting internet age checks through ID. A bit on the unhinged side.Doubt
I honestly don't careBut he is one of the few people talking about the rot in the Linux community.
Besides that age verification thing, I didn't know he was in general against anonymity. Sad. I do still think it is good he presents the issues of Linux committees. You dont have to agree with him completely.I honestly don't care
Being consistently against anonymity on the Internet is a dealbreaker, and Lunduke is consistently against anonymity on the Internet
I also really, really don't like his stance on anonymity. But I can get over it mostly because there are some people that I disagree with that about, that mostly agree with me on everything else. I see them as either misinformed on why it's important, or that they just don't understand the implications of what they are saying. Others I think are actively malicious in their intentions, but that really depends on the type of person it is.but I meant to say he is not subversive as many others.
I don't think he is as subversive than the pozzed linux devs who replace GPL licenses with MIT ones, want infinite Rust re-writes, shit the open source projects while also working at Microsoft, RedHat, corporations who show signs of using Embrace Extend Extinguish.To clarify what I mean. I have absolutely no problem with him editorializing on a story as he reports it. It's the way he choses to editorialize things. He ads an absolutely insane amount of spin to the point where it's a borderline lie onto every story. It seems pretty likely he wants to cause more problems in the linux/FOSS space, because he directly benifits from it. It doesn't come off as someone who really cares about open source software. It comes off as someone that wants to cause problems because it gets him viewers, and money. It's the same thing with the way he selectively shows facts in the stories he covers. And that's even more obvious, he will pick, and choose things that make a story look as bad as possible, or to fit as closely to his narrative as possible, because it will benifit him.
If you ask me, that is very subversive. If he didn't do that, I would be all for Lunduke. Unfortunately it seems like he can't help himself. I'm just surpised more people don't see it for what it is.
I gave my opinion on what I think his motivation is. He wants people to react to his stories, so he covers them in as inflamitory a way as possible. Purposefully presenting things in a misleading way because obviously it will make the people involved mad, it also makes the story more interesting for people that just watch his videos, or read his articles uncritically. So it benefits him to basically have no journalistic integrity. He wins when FOSS loses.I don't think he is as subversive than the pozzed linux devs who replace GPL licenses with MIT ones, want infinite Rust re-writes, shit the open source projects while also working at Microsoft, RedHat, corporations who show signs of using Embrace Extend Extinguish.
I dont lose my time listening to his videos, thry are too long. Instead, I just look at his xeets on nitter. I do agree that you have to be a sucker to pay him when he mostly finds info from this thread or hacker news or twitter.
What raised my interested in him is that he is one of the few who supported Xlibre, raising awareness about the change in licensing. I dont share his hate on Rust that much, but I am concerned by the dogmatic desire to rewrite everything and ditch gpl license.
If he was actually subversive, I think he would promote corporate interests of RedHat, Microsoft. I doubt Lunduke works for them.
I want to make sure I understand things properly, what's the major difference between the two? I know it's something about corporate entities being forced to "give back", right?I don't think he is as subversive than the pozzed linux devs who replace GPL licenses with MIT
MIT is an attribution license that requires derivative works to include the license, GPL is a restrictive license that requires all derivative works to be free software (as defined by the terms of the GPL).I want to make sure I understand things properly, what's the major difference between the two? I know it's something about corporate entities being forced to "give back", right?
To exapnd on above, any license usually allows one to sell your software or services, but BSD/MIT either require nothing in return or a general acknowledgement, wile (A)GPL require that you release the source code under the terms of itself. You can sometimes notice that with some SaaSes, where they will have a link to GitHub hidden somewhere in the footer that has the code and barebones instructions at how to run stuff. This is why (A)GPL is seen as an infection, once a piece of code licensed under it enters your project, your project in its entirety must be shared under (A)GPL. And with some projects you can see exceptions introduced, like Linux kernel, so you can keep your "derivative" closed-source, but link against a GPL library as long as it's distributed separately. There's also stuff like Apache and MPL that are kind of a middle ground too, of course, but BSD and GPL are kind of opposite ends of the permissive/copyleft spectrum.I want to make sure I understand things properly, what's the major difference between the two? I know it's something about corporate entities being forced to "give back", right?
I thought the sticker was available only to people who register using their official Israeli government email.Null has implemented DNA testing. If the site determines you're a Jew then you can have access to that sticker.