I have a Linux setup script that downloads a bunch of config files and sets them up. I also have backups of my zshrc and other configs, and that helps a ton too. I have a Linux scripts repo on GitHub where I toss all my Linux scripts and that's quite helpful too.
ipkpjersi
I think the bigger issue is Ernest simply refused outside help. He took everything on himself and didn't allow outside contributions, which is just not sustainable for a project of that size. It's a shame because I really wanted to like KBin, especially since it's written in PHP and I'm a PHP developer, but Lemmy ended out winning.
Woohoo! We internal now! No more FQDN collisions!
Also frontend web devs can barely punch out a “hello world” program in JS so there’s no way most of them are gonna be touching Rust or Haskell or something.
This is kind of true, but at the same time, I've also seen some pretty talented front-end devs fwiw.
If this hurts Firefox more than it hurts Chrome, that's probably not a good thing for the health of the Internet. Google running the Internet unchecked would be bad for everyone.
Hey now, let's not be unreasonable!!
Which websites did you run into issues with Firefox? I haven't had any issues with any websites. I do think you're right that it's probably going to get worse over time, but maybe not if more people make the switch to Firefox.
How have people not heard of toaster ovens?
With that said... I don't have one, maybe I should get one lol
Too bad nothing will come from that.
I love Librewolf currently but I worry it's going to stray too much from what it originally was like Waterfox and others ended up doing, and then end up randomly breaking compatibility with certain plugins or introducing other issues.
Right now, Librewolf is the best way to experience Firefox. Will that still be the case in 5, 10, 15 years? That remains to be seen. I hope it's still the best way to experience Firefox years from now. Having to change browsers every so often does suck tbh.
Oh, I wasn't aware of that, I thought the user-hostile restrictions were inherent to Manifest v3 and they were unavoidable.
Okay, maybe just maybe Firefox squeaks by unharmed then.
edit: I literally just had someone else tell me just now that "It’s not something that can be worked around. It’s specifically a design feature of manifest v3 to restrict these types of things."
So which is it? I'm kind of getting mixed signals here.
edit 2: Oh, it sounds like Google has additional arbitrary restrictions on content blocking functionality, beyond what Manifest V3 itself has.
Nope. I'm more of a dev than a sysadmin these days, so I never bothered learning something like Ansible or Puppet or Chef etc. A couple Bash scripts can get me nearly entirely set up so it's all I ever really needed.