@icedquinn It becomes a problem when it's an inconvenience for everyone else. Like, if I need someone but they are busy on the phone and they talk for hours, or they're on of those people who lock themselves in the bathroom just to talk on the phone.
The corporate hacks at #OSI have defined the LLMs that C.A.G.E.M.A.F.I.A. use as "open-source" without them having to provide the data (incl. art, journalism, books and whatever other content was used to train the system).
This is bad. It's bad for not only everyone in software freedom but EVERYONE who produces content.... and by that I mean EVERYONE.
The #microsoft cronies perpetuating #theft and #fraud at OSI need to repeal their demented #OSAID definition immediately, if they want to maintain any shred of respect for #opensource.
PLEASE BOOST, even if to preserve the definition of the word, #open. Thanks
#llm #opensource #opensourceWashing #openai #cagemafia #muskrochipped #microshaft #falseadvertising
@gabriel There are a lot of features that personal websites can have that can only be done through server-side scripting. Hit counters give you basic analytics without compromising readers' privacy. And why not many blogs have comment sections anymore, I think having a simple guestbook or a shoutbox on a single page allows interactivity with your audience.
@matthew
>However, the concept of a website being a program instead of just a collection of documents is really interesting and I would like to eventually do more with that.
If you are talking about webapps that replace desktop programs, don't. I think there is a case for the web being more than a remote document retrieval tool, but only in a limited sense. Shopping sites, social media sites Internet forums, guestbooks, wikis, etc have their place, but we don't need any more examples of "photoshop in the browser".
I've been thinking of this idea for years. It's a network protocol where the client is simply a JIT compiler and the server serves source code for games and other software. Kind of like Adobe Flash, except that it doesn't use the web browser and the source code for software is always available (not counting obfuscation).
@xianc78@gameliberty.club
I've thought about that.
Static has some real advantages but it wouldn't nice to have the best of both worlds
I'm starting to think that the whole "static-only website" meme from the early 2010s along with the normalization of static-site generators like Jekyll were a psyop to get websites dependent on big tech, such as using Disqus for comments, Google Analytics instead of hit counters, or Google Site Search for search functionality.
There is nothing wrong with static-sites or static-site generators, but there is a case to be made for server-side scripting, even on personal websites.
@djsumdog
>The Armory
I remember that server. I remember some tilde site on there that hosted a bunch of MIDI files.
hey there my #gamedev peers, can I interest y'all in a free & CC0 pixel font?
MONOGRAM
it has support for...
...English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, German, Dutch, Danish, Norwegian, Finnish, Ukrainian, Russian, Greek...
...and ★ 𝓲𝓽𝓪𝓵𝓲𝓬𝓼 ★ ?
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@matthew @libreoffice @EvilSandmich From my experience, it's only a big issue if the documents in question are "heavily decorated". It's mostly noticeable when opening PowerPoint files in LibreOffice Impress. For basic text documents and spreadsheets, it should be fine.