Put the E at the front and a 3 on the end and you have exactly that.
If I’m posting I’m probably high so don’t hate on me
Put the E at the front and a 3 on the end and you have exactly that.
Don’t worry, at the rate it’s going it probably will never see the light of day in any usable sense for the average person.
Fair enough, I wasn’t intending to offend anyone.
If Matrix could compete on both a quality and inertia level I’d use it instead of Discord. I’ve spent many hours on IRC too. What matters is where the users are and I’d rather spend my time developing software, not doing admin.
Why are you so angry over an opinion different to your own?
I never said it’s never going to make it, I said I care about what works for the majority with the least amount of friction.
If you took that as a personal attack that’s on you.
The you’re free to use it, that’s the great thing about choice.
The article is wrong, you disrespect your users by forcing them to use a platform that they otherwise wouldn’t just to engage with you. Github isn’t free either, but the majority of us use it for free software too.
It could install itself and I still wouldn’t use it. Nobody I care about is on there and inertia is important too. This has been true since the dawn of real-time communications platforms and isn’t going to change either.
Any non-trivial support enquiries should be directed to log a bug report/formal support request regardless of the community platform you’re using. Discord isn’t any worse than IRC in this regard and we’ve been offering support via the latter forever.
Matrix sucks, that’s why most people won’t use it. I’m already giving my software away for free and providing free support for it, why would I want to take up even more of my free time running and maintaining a Matrix server as well?
Sure, I could use an already available Matrix server but I already have a Discord account, all my friends and contributors do as well and the entire thing is easy to set up and use, plus I’m already running the Discord client too.
On top of this, the argument about searchability is irrelevant. Projects have been giving support via IRC forever which has all the same problems. The best thing to do for any non-trivial support inquiries is to direct the user to lodge a support ticket and always has been.
Matrix just isn’t a compelling option, even if it had feature parity with Discord and was easier to use, it doesn’t have any real inertia anyway.
95 was amazeballs for what it did at the time to personal computing.
But there was a reason it got replaced with NT.
Joplin
I sync it with onedrive basically for free between my phone, laptop and computer. It’s wysiwyg editor means it was basically a drop in replacement for EverNote for me, but open source and without the costs.
Microsoft products in this area are weird to me. Like C#, Powershell is great on one hand yet annoying and more difficult to rangle on the other compared to other solutions that are out there.
Joplin with any of the dozen or so sync services it supports out of the box.
Can I remote desktop a Linux PC with this, either with Wayland or X.org?
The GPL also enforces that you need to share your code, which isn’t necessarily what these devs want.
You make some good points but yeah, if you licence something under a license that allows corporations to do this don’t be surprised if they do.
I don’t know if there’s some license out there that allows free sharing of code with a limitation around using it in for-profit products and profit sharing for them and whether such a license would even work.
Sure here you go
Joplin and Lemmy.
Joplin finally freed me from dealing with the likes of Evernote ever again.
Although it works out for these developers I hate that people can do this to avoid the full consequences of their actions.