[-] Lucky@lemmy.ml 10 points 8 months ago

I've never had an issue with nuget, at least since dotnet core. My experience has it far ahead of npm and pip

[-] Lucky@lemmy.ml 29 points 9 months ago

Could it be the openly communist site using inflammatory language to bash an ideological opponent? No, it must be racism

[-] Lucky@lemmy.ml 27 points 9 months ago

Well we can play "what if" all we want, but bringing it back to the main point of Sanders, you can argue all you want about if it was the correct course of action but his vote was to stop an invading force.

[-] Lucky@lemmy.ml 26 points 9 months ago

This source seems completely unbiased and trustworthy.

[-] Lucky@lemmy.ml 11 points 9 months ago

I'm wondering if you just posted the link without reading any results and are just doubling down to sound correct.

One of the first articles is AP news reporting UN backed human rights groups calling it genocide

https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-war-human-rights-663b3a4ba24499d93f3f889e98f8b652

And an article by Time reporting the kidnapping of children being investigated as genocide, and that there is already enough evidence for the allegations

https://time.com/6262903/russia-ukraine-genocide-war-crimes/

[-] Lucky@lemmy.ml 46 points 9 months ago

The intervention was a key reason the war ended after multiple years of conflict and ethnic cleansing. Are you saying that ending the war caused more ethnic cleansing afterwards than was already happening? That ending war made things less stable?

[-] Lucky@lemmy.ml 16 points 9 months ago

It's been widely reported by numerous nations and organizations. Search for "Russian genocide Ukraine" and you'll see plenty of credible sources

[-] Lucky@lemmy.ml 67 points 9 months ago

Yugoslavia was invading Kosovo and commiting ethnic cleansing of Albanians at the time. Agree or disagree with how it was executed, it fits with the idea that he opposes the aggressors in war

[-] Lucky@lemmy.ml 7 points 10 months ago

Another way to mitigate type squatting would be namespacing crates. Much easier to verify who owns the package and related packages

[-] Lucky@lemmy.ml 7 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Don't let lack of knowledge ever be the reason to stop trying something in homelabs! Honestly for a beginner resource ChatGPT is where I'd go for these kinds of questions. It does a great job explaining what all the terms mean and you can drill down into topics as needed such as permissions and different terminal commands you'll need

Anyways, this link has a decent description of samba:

https://ubuntu.com/tutorials/install-and-configure-samba#1-overview

A Samba file server enables file sharing across different operating systems over a network. It lets you access your desktop files from a laptop and share files with Windows and macOS users.

So as long as a computer is on the network it could access files stored on this hard drive. It is super useful as a first homelab project

[-] Lucky@lemmy.ml 8 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

How does that philosophy come from Windows? Windows was all about tying your application directly to the host OS via the old .net framework and COM. You had to wait for the OS to update before your app could, or the OS could randomly update and break your app

Containers as a technology are almost entirely a Linux thing as well, Windows ships with a full Linux kernel to support it now.

[-] Lucky@lemmy.ml 6 points 11 months ago

Minnesota is home to the juicy lucy, a cheeseburger with the cheese being cooked inside the patty. Serve that with a tater tot hot dish

view more: next ›

Lucky

joined 4 years ago