[-] vampatori@feddit.uk 19 points 11 months ago

Google's first quarter 2023 report shows they made massive profits off vast revenue due to advertising.

It is about control though. The thing that caught my eye is that they're saying that only "approved" browsers will be able to access these WEI sites. So what does that mean for crawlers/scrapers? That the big tech companies on the approval board will be able to lock potential competitors out of accessing the web - new browsers, search engines, etc. but much more importantly... Machine Learning.

Google's biggest fear right now is that ML systems will completely eliminate most people's reason to use Google's search, and therefore their main source of revenue will plummet. And they're right to be scared, it's already starting to happen and it's showing us very quickly just how bad Google's search results are.

So this seems to me like an attempt to control things from that side. It's essentially the "big boys" trying to consolidate and firm-up their hold in the industry and not let newcomers rival them, as with ML the barrier to entry has never been lower.

[-] vampatori@feddit.uk 10 points 11 months ago

Red Hat saying that argument in-particular shows they've pivoted their philosophy significantly, it's a seemingly subtle change but is huge - presumably due to the IBM acquisition, but maybe due to the pressures in the market right now.

It's the classic argument against FOSS, which Red Hat themselves have argued against for decades and as an organisation proved that you can build a viable business on the back of FOSS whilst also contributing to it, and that there was indirect value in having others use your work. Only time will tell, but the stage is set for Red Hat to cultivate a different relationship with FOSS and move more into proprietary code.

[-] vampatori@feddit.uk 12 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Don't roll your own if you can help it, just use a distribution dedicated for use as a thin client. I was co-incidentally just looking into this last week and came across ThinStation which looks really good. There are other distro's too, search for "linux thin client".

[-] vampatori@feddit.uk 19 points 11 months ago

I personally found Fedora to be rock solid, and along with Ubuntu provided the best hardware support out of the box on all my computers - though it's been a couple of years since I used it. I did end up on Ubuntu non-LTS in the end as I now run Ubuntu LTS on my servers and find having the same systems to be beneficial (from a knowledge perspective).

[-] vampatori@feddit.uk 14 points 11 months ago

I hear they have improved performance now though

It's still not great. Better, but still slow enough to make you question whether you've actually launched the app or not.

[-] vampatori@feddit.uk 10 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

I just have a static page that I randomly change - you can see mine here. In this case I was testing the idea of having text within an SVG for better scaling from mobile to desktop, and also I'm loving orange and purple at the moment for some reason! Oh, and I was testing automated deployments from CI/CD, so I always use my own base domain with those first tests!

[-] vampatori@feddit.uk 10 points 11 months ago

Are there any good alternatives?

We've started using Jitsi for video/screen-sharing and that's going well so far - but it's based very much around the "corporate meeting" concept, rather than "playing D&D with mates" or "online gaming with people".

Mumble is decent enough for voice comms, but of course lacks video, which for my friend group is a deal-breaker. While the audio quality is noticably better most of the time, its noise suppression is not as good as Discord. It does have text chat, but lacks the utility of Discord's chat - which we use in D&D for sharing information, images, note-taking, etc.

Things do game tracking/voice like Steam, Xbox Live, PSN, etc. but then each only supports their own platforms and services - whereas Discord is common to all.

I think what DIscord does well is bring together a few really established, tried and tested technologies, under one roof and integrates them seamlessly. There is definitely value in that, and I would be really interested in an open source/self-hosted equivalent.

My main concerns with Discord are:

  1. They inevitably ramp up income earning opportunities and therefore eventually compromise the system.
  2. It can't be catalogued/searched easily.
  3. It seems like a near-perfect platform for harvesting data for ML (and the platform has some traction with the ML community already).
[-] vampatori@feddit.uk 14 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

I don't think consolidation, compromise, and coming together in one common direction are the hallmarks of open source at all!

Filesystems, service management/startup, audio output, desktop environment, package formats/management/distribution, programming languages, shell, and so on, and so on - all have many, many options.

Open source is, if nothing else, fractured.. it's about choice, flexibility, and re-inventing the wheel not because it really needs to be re-invented, but because it's fun to do so and useful to have something that perfectly fits your requirements.

We've made room for many package formats for decades, and will continue to do so for decades to come I'm sure.

23
submitted 11 months ago by vampatori@feddit.uk to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

I run my own small software development company and I'd like somewhere my clients can login and get access to things like:

  • Access to documents from their repo(s) (GitHub, all contracts/etc. are kept here)
  • Links to invoices and to pay.
  • Milestone progress from their repo(s) (GitHub)
  • Links to their test, staging, and production services.
  • Ability to get in touch (potentially raising an issue in GitHub).

We're just doing things manually for now, but before we reinvent the wheel I thought it would be useful to see what's out there to either use directly or extend.

[-] vampatori@feddit.uk 38 points 1 year ago

"Out of the frying pan, into the fire"

[-] vampatori@feddit.uk 9 points 1 year ago

From a personal perspective, I absolutely agree - I only check my email when I'm specifically expecting something, which is rarely. But at work emails are still incredibly important.

Are there any protocols/services designed specifically for one time codes? Receipts? I think something that's dedicated to those kinds of tasks would be great from an ease-of-use perspective - no more messing about waiting for delivery, searching through hordes of emails, checking spam folder, etc.

Another problem we have is the rise of oauth - the core idea is great, but the reality is that it ties a lot of people to these Big Tech services.

[-] vampatori@feddit.uk 9 points 1 year ago

I think the most interesting thing out of the Red Hat/CentOS/downstream thing was that Red Hat used the absolute classic argument against FOSS - "they're getting value out of this without contributing back". The argument that Red Hat themselves spent so long fighting against and building their company around proving that argument wrong.

I think it shows a shift in mind-set, perhaps born from the IBM purchase, perhaps as they start to feel the squeeze, and that they no longer fully believe in FOSS.

But it's early days, only time will tell - certainly there seems to be a fair few shifts going on at the moment though!

83

Is there some formal way(s) of quantifying potential flaws, or risk, and ensuring there's sufficient spread of tests to cover them? Perhaps using some kind of complexity measure? Or a risk assessment of some kind?

Experience tells me I need to be extra careful around certain things - user input, code generation, anything with a publicly exposed surface, third-party libraries/services, financial data, personal information (especially of minors), batch data manipulation/migration, and so on.

But is there any accepted means of formally measuring a system and ensuring that some level of test quality exists?

[-] vampatori@feddit.uk 13 points 1 year ago

It does feel like there's been a shift, especially in organisations that use the work of others for their own benefit (e.g. open source, community produced content, etc). It seems like there's been a real move to have their cake and eat it.

Oracle has just made an aggressive move with regards to Java licensing too, they're now charging as much as $15/month/employee to use their Java runtime on the desktop/server. Their FAQ even points you to OpenJDK if you don't want to pay, which is strange - it makes me think the relationship between Oracle and the OpenJDK will be ending sometime in the not-so-distant future. There are several Java projects I've done where that would just become non-viable as it was a project for a single department in a large company.

Software developers are one of the most altruistic groups of people - it's amazing just how much time and effort they put into things that they get no financial return on, only the love of actually doing it. And people that dedicate their time and effort to online communities, education, and so on are equally amazing.

But I think it's time to stop being so naive and realise that many large corporate entities are abusing this relationship for their own gain.

2

Starship is a really nice, fast, customisable shell prompt - of which there are many - but Starship supports a very wide range of things out-of-the-box.

Including docker context's. It detects Dockerfile and docker-compose.yml/yaml in the directory, and if you're not on the default context then it'll show the name of the context you're on in blue alongside a little whale icon. A tiny but very useful feature.

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vampatori

joined 1 year ago