Nice, 30 years and I didn’t know this one. I always use the $! for the last argument.
- 0 Posts
- 13 Comments
Let me teach you about reverse-i-search in bash…
wildbus8979@sh.itjust.worksto
Meshtastic@mander.xyz•Which antenna would you recommend for a base station in a somewhat urban area?
0·1 month ago12 might be a bit high, but 8 is definitely right. Remember that you don’t just need line of sight, you need to pass the fresnel zone as well.

Regardless of the gain, you can’t go wrong with the RAK antennas.
wildbus8979@sh.itjust.worksto
Meshtastic@mander.xyz•Which antenna would you recommend for a base station in a somewhat urban area?
0·1 month agoThe RAK wireless 8 or 12dBi
wildbus8979@sh.itjust.worksto
Technology@lemmy.world•Amazon angers retailers by listing products from other sites without consentEnglish
38·1 month agoWhy would a retailer turn down an additional resource that drives customers to their site.
Why would independent artisans be obligated to sell their products through Amazon?
wildbus8979@sh.itjust.worksto
Technology@lemmy.world•F*** You! Co-Creator of Go Language is Rightly Furious Over This Appreciation EmailEnglish
2011·1 month agoPython is demonstrably worst for the planet than Go.
Have you ever looked at the available packages in a Linux distribution like Debian or a BSD? There are thousands and thousands of library packaged to support software releases. Like I said, that had been the distribution model for the better of twenty+ years until this new, shittier, model.
That’s essentially how most distributions of Linux and Unix work. You package an app with a list of depencies like “libcaca >= 1.2.3” and that’s that. If that dependency isn’t available in the distro you need to have that packaged (and thus have a maintIner for said package) first. The distro’s package maintainers are responsible for keeping an eye on the upstream sources and provide reviews. Often there’s also a security team that watches for packages requiring expedited attention, and security backports.
Then this sort of crap like NPM came along and it became popular for devs to package their own dependencies.
I’m not super familiar with Maven so I could be wrong, but doesn’t Maven still pull depencies from upstream? That doesn’t fix the problem. Having depencies packaged in the OS means there is in theory some level of overview and review by the package maintainer(s).
Debian does as well for anything that is packaged; python, golang, rust, etc.
The first issue is NPM specific sure, but the second is true of all the languages I mentioned. Even golang which originally had a goal of having a built in library so vast you didn’t need much depencies has devolved into a large and fractured community.
This truly has grown past a JS problem. NPM was kind of the first time dependencies were installed by the project rather than through the OS. But nowadays this has become the norm, golang, rust, and to an extent python also work by installing dependies directly from git for the most part. This isn’t going to get any better unless we revert to OS based dependencies which noone wants to do because developers want the latest and greatest model.

What do you code for the Dreamcast?