August27th

joined 1 year ago
[–] August27th@lemmy.ca 3 points 3 months ago
[–] August27th@lemmy.ca 59 points 3 months ago (6 children)

Tell me you are too oblivious to implement CI/CD without telling me you're too oblivious to to implement CI/CD. Their builds and packaging should have been fully automated if it was such a pain. If you can make a Mac version of any software, you can make a Linux version. The debate internally was likely management being dumb as rocks and overruling anyone who actually knows anything.

[–] August27th@lemmy.ca 2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I have not read your whole comment yet, but I apologize for my heated reaction. Your post came off as oil and gas promotion to me, but that's clearly not the case. Thank you for your thoughtful response. I will read it more fully later.

[–] August27th@lemmy.ca 7 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (3 children)

Edit: thank you to people upvoting this comment, but I do regret it. The only good I now see in it is that it spurned further discussion and clarity. If you upvote this post, do read and upvote the parent comment and reply comment from anon6789, there are good insights there, at the very least.

Then any carbon removed from the atmosphere gets released when the pellet fuel is burned. Add in the carbon from making the pellets and all the shipping and cutting down the trees and replanting, and we're worse off than when we started. The net pollution they say is greater than coal or natural gas.

This makes no sense.

The net pollution they say is greater than coal or natural gas.

If "they" are oil and gas corporations, I'd say that too, if I were them. Any move against our bottom line, or competition to our subsidies is fair game for attack.

any carbon removed from the atmosphere gets released when the pellet fuel is burned

How is that wood's problem exactly? How did that carbon get into the atmosphere in the first place to be turned into wood? If there had been no coal, gas, or oil, that atmospheric carbon would have been from burning wood in the first place, making it a net cycle of wood. It grows in short order regardless of what we do with it; it's renewable.

There's a competitor to fossil fuels, returning carbon to the atmosphere, it's been burned literally forever, and oooh suddenly it's the one to be concerned about, not the other carbon emitters that can only emit, never absorb? Come on.

carbon from [harvest, manufacturing, packaging, shipping] ... we're worse off than when we started

As if the extraction, manufacturing, packaging, and shipping for fossil fuels doesn't emit vast amounts of carbon? If wood was harvested, manufactured, packaged and shipped with renewable energy, what's the problem? Why couldn't it be? If fossil fuels were harvested, manufactured, packaged and shipped with renewable energy, I'd say "cut out the middle man" and just use the renewables directly for energy. Is that your beef?

In that case, let's harvest that wood anyway, turn it into charcoal, and sink it to the bottom of the ocean to get carbon back out of our atmosphere permanently. If you think that's a ridiculous undertaking, it's even crazier to think about the absurd amounts of carbon we are digging up and plain dumping into the atmosphere every day, and that wasn't complained about first, before complaining about wood of all things. We don't just need to stop emitting new carbon, we need to get it back out of the atmosphere forever, and that's not even on the radar? Hmm.

What do you suggest we do? All I'm seeing is rhetoric is that trees are a grift, while suspiciously overlooking the fossil fuel subsidy grift.

[–] August27th@lemmy.ca 12 points 5 months ago

Evolution doesn't demand anything, it's literally about adaptation. The expectation of infinite growth inside an obviously finite system is the death cult.

[–] August27th@lemmy.ca 2 points 5 months ago

"I'm a cat, I kill for fun."

[–] August27th@lemmy.ca 2 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

Dude, you are the greatest of all time. Thank you for posting this.

Edit: do/have you ever used sausage anywhere in there?

[–] August27th@lemmy.ca 3 points 5 months ago (4 children)

making a carbon copy

Is making it difficult?

[–] August27th@lemmy.ca 18 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (2 children)

Might be this dude; it is not free, just very affordable in their market. It turns out making it affordable also brings in a lot of revenue.

https://youtu.be/44Do5x5abRY

[–] August27th@lemmy.ca 40 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

O.C.: Have you consulted about this “tables” approach with other Lua developers?

I.T.: After that, I went back to Dmitry and asked him if my understanding of “everything is a table” was correct and, if so, why Lua was designed this way. Dmitry told me that Lua was created at the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro and that it was acceptable for Pontifical Catholic Universities to design programming languages this way.

Lol what? Is there some kind of inside joke about Catholics and tables?

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