Avatar

dpflug

dpflug@kbin.earth
Joined
0 posts • 65 comments
Direct message

If I recall, the rule of thumb is orders of magnitude. If you have 100 active users, there are probably about 1,000 lurkers, and only 10 substantial users that account for most of your content.

This is the rule from corporate marketing stats, tho, so who knows if the Fedi works the same.

permalink
report
parent
reply

Sir, this is a Wendy’s /m/memes.

You’re right tho.

permalink
report
parent
reply

See, that makes sense. You’re probably right. They didn’t paren their parenthetical.

permalink
report
parent
reply

Pickles is very cute. Very friend shaped.

permalink
report
reply

I like the FreeBSD option because Beastie, but also GuixSD for something truly different.

permalink
report
reply

I have been pooped on by a spider.

permalink
report
reply

I think maybe you’re confused. Java drives a significant percentage of Android apps. It absolutely can do modern UI. I can almost guarantee you’ve interacted with a Java program this year that you never considered.

Pascal is more niche, but it can do modern, too.

Java was doing web clients before the web could and still can. I don’t know much about Delphi’s web stuff, but I know they’ve targeted it for years now.

WASM and transpiling blur the lines, too. LVGL can provide beautiful interfaces on the web as well as platforms Electron could never target, and works with any language compatible with the C ABI.

I’m not saying these strategies are without their own warts, but there are other ways to deliver good experiences across platforms with a ~single codebase in a smaller payload. But mostly nobody bothers because they just reach for Electron. It’s this era’s “nobody ever got fired for picking Intel”.

We need more people working with and on alternatives, not just for efficiency but also for the health of the software ecosystem. Google’s browser hegemony is feasting. Complexity has become their moat, preventing a fork from being viable without significant resources. Mozilla is off in a corner consuming itself in desperation.

A US-based company holds a monopoly over the free web and a hell of a lot of our non-web software. So maybe let’s look for ways to avoid feeding the beast, yes? And we can get more efficient software in the process.

permalink
report
parent
reply

Before that, it was RCS, released in '82.

permalink
report
parent
reply

AUR isn’t the Arch package manager. It’s a user-contributed package definition repo.

permalink
report
parent
reply

If it helps, we’ve found cooking the noodles was unnecessary. It holds together better if you don’t.

permalink
report
parent
reply