Glad Nvidia has seen the writing on the walls and isn’t treating desktop Linux like a second-class citizen.
Glad Nvidia has seen the writing on the walls and isn’t treating desktop Linux like a second-class citizen.
What’s funny is Java solved an issue that is pretty much non-existent in today’s environment: compatibility.
It’s much less like the Wild West these days. People have a clearer picture of what to support, how to support it, and generic tools to abstract platform-specific code.
I like Java. I think they did good things and had a pragmatic approach to the problems they were trying to solve.
But time goes on, and this young discipline progresses fast. It’ll be interesting to see decades from now what languages survive and which ones don’t.
I predict as time goes on, we’ll get fewer big languages (popular, widespread, useful, etc.) and they will stick around for much longer.
Kind of like human language, if you think about it.
I don’t really thing the security ‘guarantees’ of rust matter that much.
I think it’s a better language to work in than C or C++, though. That’s not a reason to change utilities now, but a larger Rust ecosystem is always better in my humble opinion.
What for?
Personally, I’m a huge fan in unifying software under one language.
I think that’s fair.
Eventually, the Rust-alternatives will be battle-hardened too and we can simply choose what suits us best.
It’s a good time for software, honestly.
This is the cold, sad truth of Linux.
Unfortunately, when a company does not meet your standards, the solution is not to give them your money. Not to lower your standards.
Most big companies have feedback channels for customers on their websites.
What company are you talking about in particular?
Who cares?
Just wanna dispel the notion that people only do things for money: you’re posting on Lemmy right now.
I’m not glad he’s dead, but I’m glad he’s gone.
Copyright and patent laws need to die.
I’d be happy with the destruction of copyright and patent laws.