Hah. Our man @npub1ns5c...ah7f is at it again: I've hinted at it in previous posts: I'm working on a new fork of DuckStation from before it went proprietary, and I will have it ready in a few days. I've heavily archived everything from Duckstation, even pull requests, wikis etc - I can't re-publish all of it, e.g. wiki text has no license. A number of contributors have reached out to me, who indeed confirm they *did not* authorise DuckStation's recent licensing changes.
Been playing with macOS for a new opensource project I'm working on. I only care about Linux/BSD, but the code I'm working on has Linux, Mac, Windows and Android ports, so I need to handle those. I'm teaching myself how to build software on macOS. I don't see how anyone stays sane using it. Windows is next. I've never used MacOS except briefly in 2007. I haven't used Windows since 2009. I now appreciate my Debian LXDE setup much more. So much simpler and easier to use. Superior in every way.
New Libreboot release soon.
I've been informed that a popular PlayStation emulator, called DuckStation, became proprietary software (was GPLv3, now PolyForm Strict 1.0.0 which restricts non-commercial usage and modification). DuckStation was Free Software. I've decided to archive DuckStation from before the license change. Please see: If you were using it, please ask the devs to change it back to GPL. Hardware preservation matters, as is preserving that preservation in a free-as-in-freedom way.
I watched this excellent speech today, though it was made in 2019: In it, @npub1p095...m5vl makes the case in favour of smaller, more federated communication infrastructure within Europe, making use of p2p protocols like ActivityPub (which mastodon uses). He's talking to representatives within the EU parliament, on the issue of how best to fund investment in communication technology, warning against funding companies like FaceBook. The points he makes there are still true in 2024.
Saw this meme the other day and thought it was amusing. And accurate.
Posted on IRC earlier and I'm repeating here: <leah> i have a vision for america <leah> land of the free, home of the gay <leah> make america gay again We were saying how much of a jackass Trump is, and I pictured an alternative reality where America's politicians defend LGBT rights, instead of A) attacking it directly like the republicans do or B) paying weak lip service to it like the democrats do (while passing KOSA which will censor LGBT info on the internet) american politicians are lame
I was telling a Mac user something, which I realised was profound: Linux/BSD is easier to use than any Windows or Mac system, because the underlying software is simpler; the terminal seems more complicated to novices, but you can do on sh in 5 seconds what would take about a minute of clicking in a GUI. With a unix shell, unix utilities, and especially a good C compiler, you can do 100% of things. The UI does 2%. And MacOS is unix too but in practise you don't use the terminal for most things.
I've sorted through the lab and realised I have 240GB SATA SSDs I'm not using. For a limited time while I have them, I'm offering a cheaper version of the Libreboot 9020, as seen here: I normally ship 1TB NVMe or 2TB NVMe. These are still available. For a lower price, you can choose 240GB *SATA* SSD; the lowest spec with this is currently £158. Libreboot replaces proprietary BIOS/UEFI. Your choice of Debian, other distro or BSD. EDIT: 240GB now available on laptops.
Fun fact: Minifree still provides Linux-libre distros on request, e.g. Trisquel. It even still provides Atheros WiFi cards (linux-libre compatible), when asked. This has never not been true, it's just that Intel WiFi became the default. I *finally* had one email too many, as of today, asking about this, so I decided to simply mention it everywhere on minifree.org. Also see: On this page, you can select Intel AX210 WiFi, but you can alternatively request Atheros WiFi.