kabat

joined 1 year ago
[–] kabat 2 points 1 year ago (21 children)

Miss all on accounts my man. I'm Polish and we know full well what it means to live under Russian rule. We remember September 1939 backstab and 1944-45 campaign of bringing freedom by Soviets. My family on all imaginable sides has suffered significant loss from those. Time passes but Russian soldiers somehow behave the same, as proven by the current conflict. So maybe there's more to it than just "armed conscripts", I don't know what it is exactly, but I do fully associate that with Russians. Feel free to call me racist for that, comes out fairly funny given Poles and Russians are Slavs.

Oh and conscripts you say? Didn't Russians claim it's fully professional army back then? So maybe it's a matter of training. I also don't think what happened at Bucha can be attributed to actions of a few rogue conscripts, it had to come from a higher level of command.

[–] kabat 3 points 1 year ago (27 children)

Oh yeah totally, they don't need to fight Russia, they should just give up and let Russians do what they did in Bucha to the whole country. Of course Russians are known to peacefully incorporate conquered territories with no harm done whatsoever to civilians.

Some countries might not be worth fighting for, I guess that's true. Some other countries are always worth fighting against though, and Russia is one of them.

[–] kabat 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

XCOM, or, more recently released, Baldur's Gate 3 fits too.

[–] kabat 2 points 1 year ago

In English that's called paucal vs plural forms, Polish has the same rules as Russian.

Sidenote: there are translation systems that support it, e.g. Qt does (https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/i18n-plural-rules.html).

[–] kabat 5 points 1 year ago

So does Jerboa tbh.

[–] kabat 1 points 1 year ago

Favorite? Kotlin generally speaking, but I use Python the most and like it quite much as well. Can't beat Python's time for zero to something useful running and you will find bindings and frameworks for anything.

C++ for anything performance sensitive, or running anything on my Synology NAS.

[–] kabat 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah very common in Spark world, but haven't seen it used much elsewhere.

[–] kabat 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

That approach could work in the past, but it won't now. Now we have the internet when even people shamed by their family or neighbors will find support and like-minded individuals. We are only going to be more divided in the future.

[–] kabat 7 points 1 year ago

Certs for me can be a net negative - if you have one, I expect you to know shit. An answer of "I don't know, but here's my take on it" is a good answer in my book, because we can't all know everything and I'm generally more interested in attitude and thought process than pure knowledge. But that changes when you are certified and brag about it on your resume. That bar goes higher, for no apparent gain to be honest. Example: if you have "certified AWS Foo Bar" and you don't know what a vpc is, that's a red flag for me. It wouldn't be otherwise, even if you had AWS experience listed, because maybe you were just working with ECS and didn't need to know jack shit about vpcs.

About the only situation in which a cert is a plus is when you have close to zero relevant experience. But all of the above still applies.

[–] kabat 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

There's this https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qtquickcontrols-material.html available as stock style. I don't know about "You" variant of material design, so I can't really say if that's it. There are a couple of style implementations on GitHub as well.

[–] kabat 2 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Qt QML works for me. It's declarative, easy to learn, looks good, you can write logic in JavaScript, or have your code on the backend in C++, or Python with PySide. You can easily iterate on the desktop and run the exact same app on the phone, or TV. It's fast too. And given you want to go open source, licensing is not a headache (unlike closed source on LGPL Qt).

Generally it's been my UI of choice for years and I'm pretty happy with it, now with excellent Python support even more so (though I don't know how, or even if, it's possible on mobile).

[–] kabat 4 points 1 year ago

Years ago, while I was a poor students I compiled Gentoo on an overclocked Celeron CPU at whopping 533 MHz. Took literally 3 days to get to a functioning KDE desktop.

Worth every second, especially because it was winter and the dorm room was cold. My friends appreciated it too, they nicknamed my desktop "the reactor" for all the warmth it provided compiling all the damn time.

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