🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1408 ARCHIVED:88520 CACHE:2530 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1407 ARCHIVED:88509 CACHE:2521 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1406 ARCHIVED:88503 CACHE:2547 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1405 ARCHIVED:88497 CACHE:2550 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1404 ARCHIVED:88485 CACHE:2544 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1403 ARCHIVED:88482 CACHE:2542 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1402 ARCHIVED:88477 CACHE:2562 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1401 ARCHIVED:88472 CACHE:2558 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1400 ARCHIVED:88470 CACHE:2557 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1399 ARCHIVED:88461 CACHE:2553 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1398 ARCHIVED:88454 CACHE:2548 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1397 ARCHIVED:88446 CACHE:2562 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1396 ARCHIVED:88443 CACHE:2565 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1395 ARCHIVED:88418 CACHE:2541 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
The Linux installation on my main PC turned 14 today:
$ head -n 1 /var/log/pacman.log
[2011-07-07 11:19] installed filesystem (2011.04-1)
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1394 ARCHIVED:88409 CACHE:2543 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1393 ARCHIVED:88408 CACHE:2543 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1392 ARCHIVED:88401 CACHE:2539 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1391 ARCHIVED:88396 CACHE:2535 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1390 ARCHIVED:87839 CACHE:2584 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
Why I’m still a minimalist after 14 years ⌘ Read more
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1389 ARCHIVED:87827 CACHE:2584 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1388 ARCHIVED:87820 CACHE:2603 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1387 ARCHIVED:87814 CACHE:2599 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1386 ARCHIVED:87795 CACHE:2602 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1385 ARCHIVED:87790 CACHE:2604 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1384 ARCHIVED:87784 CACHE:2673 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1383 ARCHIVED:87781 CACHE:2688 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1382 ARCHIVED:87766 CACHE:2684 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1381 ARCHIVED:87759 CACHE:2692 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1380 ARCHIVED:87754 CACHE:2699 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1379 ARCHIVED:87753 CACHE:2701 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
Saw this on Mastodon:
https://racingbunny.com/@mookie/114718466149264471
18 rules of Software Engineering
- You will regret complexity when on-call
- Stop falling in love with your own code
- Everything is a trade-off. There’s no “best” 3. Every line of code you write is a liability 4. Document your decisions and designs
- Everyone hates code they didn’t write
- Don’t use unnecessary dependencies
- Coding standards prevent arguments
- Write meaningful commit messages
- Don’t ever stop learning new things
- Code reviews spread knowledge
- Always build for maintainability
- Ask for help when you’re stuck
- Fix root causes, not symptoms
- Software is never completed
- Estimates are not promises
- Ship early, iterate often
- Keep. It. Simple.
Solid list, even though 14 is up for debate in my opinion: Software can be completed. You have a use case / problem, you solve that problem, done. Your software is completed now. There might still be bugs and they should be fixed – but this doesn’t “add” to the program. Don’t use “software is never done” as an excuse to keep adding and adding stuff to your code.
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1378 ARCHIVED:87729 CACHE:2694 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1377 ARCHIVED:87719 CACHE:2687 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1376 ARCHIVED:87698 CACHE:2671 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1375 ARCHIVED:87691 CACHE:2671 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1374 ARCHIVED:87681 CACHE:2671 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1373 ARCHIVED:87677 CACHE:2676 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1372 ARCHIVED:87663 CACHE:2673 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
On my blog: Free Culture Book Club — Tag Team https://john.colagioia.net/blog/2025/06/14/tag-team.html #freeculture #bookclub
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1371 ARCHIVED:87645 CACHE:2661 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1370 ARCHIVED:87623 CACHE:2689 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1369 ARCHIVED:87615 CACHE:2689 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1368 ARCHIVED:87599 CACHE:2702 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
FreeBSD 14.3 released
FreeBSD 14.3 has been released, an important point release for those of us using the FreeBSD 14.x branch. This release brings 802.11ac (Wi-Fi 5) support to many modern laptop wireless chips, OCI container images are now available in Docker and GitHub repositories, and a number of cornerstone packages have been updated to their latest versions. ⌘ Read more
6.14.11: stable
Version:6.14.11 (EOL) (stable)Released:2025-06-10Source:linux-6.14.11.tar.xzPGP Signature:linux-6.14.11.tar.signPatch:full ( incremental)ChangeLog:ChangeLog-6.14.11 ⌘ Read more
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1367 ARCHIVED:87591 CACHE:2698 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1366 ARCHIVED:87588 CACHE:2696 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1365 ARCHIVED:87577 CACHE:2688 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14