FSR FTW IMO.
A lot of those issues of ‘multiple primaries’ can be resolved with intelligent data types and actions. That is, if we have a notion of how the data is organized, a lot of decisions can be made a priori. Ones that can’t can be read-only during a split.
Comment groups are mergeable sets. Any unique comment is a valid comment.
For any individual comment, any tombstone causes a comment to be unseeable (and ideally be deleted). Any edits are latest-wins.
A lot can be sorted out that way - enough to be usable. Some databases even support that on a db level.
If you do try Linux:
That said, most of the systems I use Linux on, it just works.
Meh. Most of the top comments are pretty reasonable.
fwiw, I’m now pretty darn happy with Linux and gaming. Granted, I use Steam, so there’s that.
There are issues sometimes, but I just keep a copy of windows around for windows-only things. Generally, Linux “just works” for me, but I’ve also learned to just skip it when something requires too much involvement to get working.
Times change, and people are slow. ‘Colored people’ used to be the most PC, now it’s an insult. Because it could, in any old fart’s brain, be either the most PC thing or an insult, you never know if the person is doing so intentionally or not, which sucks because:
…the divide just grows until people resolve it inside themselves.
I think this might be interesting:
Be careful not to cross that line of request vs desperation.
Like on YouTube - A tasteful “don’t forget to like and subscribe” is fine, but mentioning it multiple times during a video is just increasingly demanding or cringe.
It’s been a little annoying. Anyways, thanks for thinking of FMHY.
…it wasn’t what he said, it was the implication.
Hate is dull.
Your attitude, though. Slather on that hate nice and thick. Was it good for you? Make you feel better now that you have someone to hang?
TBH, paywalled content leads to a lot of people who haven’t read it participating in shallow and contentious conversations based around clickbaity titles. I say keep the rule of no twitter.
It’s still a self-replicating thought. …although the meaning has gotten broader in some areas, narrower in others, and much shallower overall.
It’s the next evolution of planned obsolescence - it just doesn’t work as soon as you start to use it.