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gandalf_der_12te

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de
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I feel you.

I’m 24 y/o now, and have never had a serious job interview in my life. The few jobs that I’ve had, I got through family connections, but I can’t only rely on them (they’re seasonal jobs).

So, I’m planning to do something like cashier at a local grocery store now. They hire students with no real background in the field, and that’s just what I have. Also, I’m trying to get to do some voluntary work (homeless daycare organization). Let’s see how it all turns out.

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Either we guarantee basic income, or we declare human life worthless and shoot those responsible for our misery.

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Expectations that people have about others’ emotions are the true scar in the world.

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Nobody with a functioning brain

This still leaves a surprising number of people

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Honestly, having a declarative package manager is pretty important.

Consider the following: We’ve had the transition from Sys V Init to Systemd recently. But what does it actually mean?

It means, that instead of running a command to start a service, you now flip a switch in a clear, standardized way. The advantage is that you can get a table-like overview over all the services that are currently running. You get an overview, in other words. That is worth a lot because it brings structure and clarity into your system.

Now, with package management it’s the same way. Instead of running a command to install a package, we should instead give a list of all the packages that we want to have installed, and the package manager should take care of making sure that they are installed. That would improve clarity, because you get a list of all the packages that are installed. It might also increase efficiency if you’re installing many packages, because large parts of the work can be done in parallel. And importantly, you get reproducibility. Imagine you just have a file where it names all the packages that should be installed. You can just take that list and copy it to another machine. Now you’ve cloned your package installations. I guess things like Docker, with their docker files, are kinda already going in that direction. But it would be nice to have support for it in the mainline operating systems.

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IMO the best knowledge comes from doing practical examples that actually interest you. I wouldn’t rush that.

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AI is the last next big thing

And then there is solar panels and spaceflight.

But after that, yeah, probably that’s the end of it.

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Yeah I feel the same thing. It’s such a shame that there is no normal, decent hardware. No bloatware, just functioning.

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Apparently California is pretty far progressed on its track to renewable energy?

What’s shown on the image is california electricity generation in April May 20, 2024 (But the data is representative for all of April as well). Yellow is solar, red line is demand.

I don’t have the source rn, I only have this screenshot stored on my phone.

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