Reminder that there is a 100$ bounty available to someone who successfully implements the Diaspora protocol as a module/plugin for !postActiv #postActiv
@lnxw48a1 It's eerily similar to language used by the Schutzstaffel in political rallies that preceded the rise of the Aberpartei Nationalsocialiste in Germany. I think a lot of the Nazi imagery and comparisons are largely projection.
@chen @delores #Palemoon has been okay. They've undone many of the most annoying things that #Firefox did. I do wonder whether they can survive as Goana and Gecko (or whatever the new Rust-enhanced engine will be called) continue to diverge.
@taknamay In some areas (mostly large corporate customers), #Smalltalk still gets used. Consider it an alternative to #Java and #C-Sharp, in real-world use where Haskell & Scheme will never gain traction. (Scala & Groovy & Jython & JRuby, being JVM languages, seem to be used mostly in environments where Java is the standard.)
Though I'm telling you this, I admit that $EMPLOYER is no longer a Java environment, so this could be out of date.
@moonman I used to walk 7 1/2 miles in 100F+, buy a pint of Hagen Dazs or Frusen Gladje and a bottle of Coke, eat the ice cream and drink the Coke, then walk back.
@lnxw37a2 @lnxw48a1 @cbowdon @normandy The main issue with Python 3 seems to be that it's slightly more complicated to get stuff running from it since not all distro's package Python stuff for version 3 as well.
For example Centos 7 has mod_wsgi and mysql-connector only for Python 2. Meaning you need to install through pip. It's not impossible, but it's enough of a bother that people who aren't invested in moving stuff to Python 3 will often default to Python 2.
@maiyannah @hedgemage @bradydale It was automatic when I tried #Keybase. If you followed the instructions, your privkey was uploaded. Which is why I closed my Keybase account and killed the gpg for that e-mail account.
@BradyDale Please don't encourage people to try keybase! Unless they've reformed themselves, they still encourage users who probably don't know better to upload their private keys, which is a HUGE security risk. They're called private keys for a reason.