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Could you tell me more about what you mean by WordPress holding code for ransom? I tried searching but couldn't find much.

I'm not sure why you consider applying this model to be "grandstanding for attention or money", and (re: bus factor) I'm not sure why a team of developers couldn't work this way too.

As for cost...someone who wants to work - and continue working - for the community will obviously want to price their time in a manner satisfactory to the community. Could you give any examples of people charging exorbitant sums using this model?

PS: The "XMPP author" was not actually on XMPP. Also, that author was (as I mentioned) advocating for disallowing commercial use, which - forget about being "congruent" - goes against every definition of "open source" or freedom-respecting software...in contrast, I'm pretty sure the Free Software Definition doesn't say anything about your development or monetization model, as long as the four freedoms of users are respected.


Thank you!


I use kmonad to make Space act as Control when held, and it's absolutely life-changing - not just in Emacs, but in all applications.

This is my configuration -

https://codeberg.org/contrapunctus/dotfiles/src/branch/produ...

And here's my blog post about it -

https://contrapunctus.codeberg.page/blog/keyboard-machinatio...


I will absolutely try this one out, it looks a lot more useful than binding caps lock.


Are you sure the address actually exists on OpenStreetMap? You can add it with StreetComplete (Android) or Go Map (iOS).


At the risk of stating the blatantly obvious...

Centralized architecture allows centralized control, notably over promotion and moderation. Facebook, Twitter/X, and other centralized platforms are absolutely responsible for what they promote and what they moderate. That someone could state otherwise staggers belief.

Decentralized architectures allow for more freedom of providers, content promotion and moderation policies, and apps.

To sum, the protocol and architecture changes everything.

Also, plenty of software freedom activists choose platforms based on protocol and architecture. Myself included, so you've now met at least one. :)


  > Also, plenty of software freedom activists choose platforms based on protocol and architecture. Myself included, so you've now met at least one. :)
Would you still choose that particular platform, if nobody from your social circle used it? If yes, how do you use social media, if not for communicating with your social circle?


I tell people to join it, and I help them join it.

Here's an example of the steps I take to engage in such advocacy for XMPP. https://contrapunctus.codeberg.page/the-quick-and-easy-guide...


If Big Tech social platforms are junk food and the Fediverse is a healthy home-cooked meal, then what is Bluesky?


Could that be an organic donut?


Pros of Organic Maps compared to OsmAnd -

* Rendering and routing are faster (especially noticeable on older devices)

* Renders 3D buildings

* Far smpler UI, so it's hard for tech-illiterate users to get stuck

* Changes made with the Organic Maps editor become visible in your Organic Maps immediately. In OsmAnd, your edits vanish upon upload, and only appear once there is a map update - this can be as early as in one hour (using OsmAnd Live), or as late as one month.

* Organic Maps is less buggy.

Cons of Organic Maps compared to OsmAnd -

* OsmAnd has far more features, like bus or share taxi routing, aerial imagery, 3D relief, analysis of GPS tracks, radius ruler, etc

* OsmAnd can render a lot more data like street surface, smoothness, access restrictions, lighting, features with FIXME tags, OSM notes, etc.

* Organic Maps only updates data once a month. OsmAnd updates data monthly too, but also has the OsmAnd Live feature to update data every hour.

* OsmAnd's editor supports adding arbitrary keys, whereas Organic Maps' does not.


You forgot energy wastage and environmental destruction.


ITYM "meant _no_ harm"


you're correct, my bad. :)


While the article might be from 1995, the library is still maintained. There have been releases each year since 2019, including one last month. https://ap5.com/


No QL?


Correct, it's not currently available on Quicklisp. I made a Git version of this package in the past, and I may try to publish it on Quicklisp.

(I should note that I'm not the author of AP5.)


I'm not sure what you mean - could you please elaborate on the question?


I believe he’s asking if it’s available via QuickLisp. It’s a sort of package manager for Common Lisp, but it seems to no longer be maintained.


Ah, thanks for the clarification. Quicklisp is very much maintained and is the de-facto standard method for installing Common Lisp packages :) Although there are alternatives, too - https://github.com/CodyReichert/awesome-cl#library-manager


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