• vga@sopuli.xyz
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    23 hours ago

    And it’s actually not slightly worse but better in every way.

  • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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    24 hours ago

    Slightly?

    Also, let’s say it’s truly just slightly, how long was it way worse before it became slightly worse?

  • Artyom@lemm.ee
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    18 hours ago

    All-Star team

    You’ve never worked on software in a big company have you?

    • n7gifmdn@lemmy.caOP
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      13 hours ago

      I can only speak for myself, but I used to love to get home from work and contribute to free software projects I found interesting. Since I got a good paying tech job at a big company, the last thing I want to do is more of the same when I get home. (having kids around the same time probably had an influence too).

  • pyre@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    the problem is that in the vast majority of cases, designers aren’t involved. it’s just code monkeys trying their best to implement functionality but without UI/UX design they are barely usable by the average person. I guess just by its nature open source is less of a concept in design so you don’t get many volunteers. also designers are probably more averse to doing work for free since every goddamn costumer tries to get them to work for free.

  • lemmus@szmer.info
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    8 hours ago

    Thats the point. People should realize that just because someone is doing some software as a hobby doesn’t mean he doesn’t need to earn money. YOU PEOPLE, IF YOU USE GREAT SOFTWARE PAY FOR IT PLEASE. Don’t let great FOSS software die out, and donate. Just give those 20$, its not much for you (some shitty chineese gadgets), and its so much for devs if everyone do that. Wherever you want to buy some chineese gadget, donate it to actually great software instead of chineese scammer please.

  • mumblerfish@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    “Slightly worse”. I got a job and was not allowed to use a linux laptop, so I went with mac. I was almost worried that I would like the “just works” aspects everyone have been so exited about. Wow. What a piece of shit it is. Settings items takes forever to load after boot, mouse feels like it is stuck in mud (even if I remove accelleration and increase speed), it cannot wake many monitors up from sleep, it completely disables the keyboard momentarily when activating the screen (and if it fails to wake it, it becomes a flashing, keyboard grabbing nightmare). The window management? I can set up a workspace on this and that keybind, “oh, you disconnected the monitor, well we permuted the keybinds for you” wtf? When I get home and switch to linux, it is such a relief.

    • rumba@lemmy.zip
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      10 hours ago

      I got a job and was not allowed to use a linux laptop, so I went with mac.

      Same. 2015. I could have pushed them to let me use Linux, but it would have been making waves in a remote shop. The 2015 MacBook hardware was decent, so I got it. Domain binding was still in fashion. 99 problems. Finally, I got it okay-ish, set up Brew, it’s a hack. I started trying to use the terminal to do things, almost no config available, the disk mount subsystem was alien, the logs were crap. Since then, the hardware and compatibility has just gotten awful.

    • babybus@sh.itjust.works
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      19 hours ago

      Lol, since the last major update I can’t type a tilde or a backtick, presumably because it doesn’t recognize my keyboard type?? And I had to install another program that prevent Apple Music from opening each time I connect/disconnect bluetooth headphones?? Or to add week numbers to the calendar widget. Even Gnome isn’t that bad.

      • mumblerfish@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        I had that from the start… It cannot distinguish some keyboards, and I have two versions of my layout I have to switch between. All keybords work the same on linux, but mac, nah.

        And updates? Holy shit! They broke ssh! It was broken like a month. Ssh connections just died as ‘corrupted’ all the time. And they don’t hotfix it asap? How can a company trust to use them as a work laptop if they break it and don’t fix it?

      • RecluseRamble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        16 hours ago

        presumably because it doesn’t recognize my keyboard type??

        The answer by Apple (and their parroting fanbois): You don’t actually need those keys. It’s confusing for users to have too many characters.

        • n7gifmdn@lemmy.caOP
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          15 hours ago

          this is what they mean by “just works” is that it doesn’t do much of anything.

          • trolololol@lemmy.world
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            13 hours ago

            It means what is not already happening will never happen.

            Tinkering is for hippies and hippies are communist.

            • n7gifmdn@lemmy.caOP
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              13 hours ago

              I guess it matters what you mean by hippies. My dad and all the other old foggies he smoked pot with in the '60s are all #MAGA now.

  • Hoohoo@fedia.io
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    1 day ago

    Hah! Like a corporation will improve a product when they’re milking it out for a decade.

  • Windex007@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Do you have any idea how many jira states our development workflow has?

    I wonder how much appetite there is for project managers and scrum masters in the open source world.

    • shutz@lemmy.ca
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      12 hours ago

      What’s funny to me is, the agile approach seems like it’s a much better fit for open-source, non-commercial software development.

      The corporate world and is management practices based around quarters and deadlines can’t seem to see how anything could get done without deadlines, but that’s usually less of a factor with open-source. People laugh at “scrum masters” because in a corporate environment, all the scrum stuff tends to be mostly performative. But it seems to me that open-source projects with multiple contributors already kind of work in an agile manner.

      • Windex007@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        I don’t see the two environments as necessarily being at odds in any way.

        If implementing feature X is going to take a developer 10 days… It’s going to take a developer 10 days. I can say the deadline is 1 day all I want, it’s going to take 10 days.

        If I want to get my Volkswagen golf down a 1/4 mile, it doesn’t matter how hard I push the gas pedal, it’s going to take as long as it takes.

        In a corporate environment, if deadlines are what you’re optimizing for, you have options. You can cut scope. You can add resources. You can decrease quality. You can forgo time intensive processes designed to reduce risk. These are still all agile activities. Making deliberate decisions, and continually evaluating those decisions is agile.

        Agile doesn’t mean there are no timelines or goals. It’s just that the design and implementation are routinely examined for suitability to your ultimate goals.

        So I actually think agile is better suited to corporate environments because of how volatile the definition of delivered value is. Open source projects usually have a less volatile vision

  • Dharma Curious (he/him)@slrpnk.net
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    1 day ago

    If we’re talking Lemmy and Lemmy clients, I’d argue it’s a helluva lot better. For one, I can rotate my fucking screen

    Hell, the thing that got my to switch was when they got rid of third party apps, because of how absolutely abysmally shitty the official app is