There are many bawdy jokes Id like to make concerning that citation. June 25, 2021 10:56 PM, jbra...@dismail.de wrote:
> That and their software is top notch! Linus called their developers > "masturbating monkeys", because of their obsessive pursuit of security! > hahaha. At every shutdown, the OpenBSD kernel is re-linked. It's the same > kernel when you reboot it, but the binary is re-ordered. That's amazing! Yes, they are highly capable and ambitious. I picked up that information, having researched Hyperbola... based upon your prompt. >> Additionally, while I understand that MIT is in many ways deficient >> compared to GPL licenses, if not pernicious and counterproductive I do >> empathise regarding why networking engineers may prefer having a licence >> which permits encapsulation more readily. > > Well, what is interesting, is that the HyperbolaBSD developers intend to > rewrite 20% of the BSD kernel and license the whole project GPL. :) > > My personal feeling is that GNU should adopt Org mode as their documentation > standard. It's slightly easier to use than texinfo. Thought texinfo is > pretty rad. :) I love Latex, Context, I feel a bit weird for not having dabbled with Texinfo. Im not sure Texinfo is going to sway enough younger programmers (Im neither young nor old), I fear too many have been malconditioned into accepting delible communication techniques - Texinfo may no longer cut it. I would consider Org mode to probably be the most acceptable default, though in many respects Skribilo could be more of a purer expression of a complete Guix approach. Are the aforementioned all different ways of dissuading people from considering Guix or documenting for it? FYI, I have been wading into the Gemini protocol the last two months. Beyond its more noticable security and publishing advantages, I have been entranced by the terseness of its Gem .gmi (minimalist MarkDown) format. I consider it has crossover appeal (as least between documenting power users across OSes). FYI, the OpenBSD crowd seem to have the lead in the Gemini space - but this is presumable for the protocol rather than the markdown. Since then I stopped annotating in Orgmode and will be building workflows to (eventually?) approximate a lot of Orgmode functionality. Obviously Orgmode is awesome but I wonder if it is too designed around individual workflows and procedures - where greater payoff comes from pooled workflows and procedures. I had success/pleaseure converting from .gem to .org formats with this experimentation (concerning annotations for a Guix CWL blog post) => https://git.sr.ht/~indieterminacy/q1q20hqh_kq_oq_parsing_gem_zsh/tree >From the tree you can see that it is feasible to output to *tex* or *html* >formats, using simple REGEX foo. Additionally there is an unfinished attempt at exporting to (sic) Skribilo. (You may want to ignore the potentially impenitrable annotations, which concerns a 'Recursive Modelling Language' Ive been working on - it would certainly confuse this topic) I would be happy if Guix writing was done with minimal Gem markup but with heavy Lisp usage for interpretation, synthesis, collection and publishing of content. I had originally taken the approach that there should be Tex heavy markup first and then simplified transposing into other formats later. Now Im on the other end of the horseshoe. I miss experimenting with regards to Tikz as a mechanism for generating graphics. I understand why other tools are used and ho programmers tend to seemingly think in terms of characters. It bothers me that I do not have beautiful graph displays representing my environment - to consider things from an impressionistic viewpoint and a contrast to text-editor/browser dualism. I suspect it isnt insurmountable and could allow visually minded people to not feel aggrieved by TUIscapes. > What do you mean by: > >> empathise regarding why networking engineers may prefer having a licence >> which permits encapsulation more readily. I mean: the MIT license allows you to operate in a commercial setting, whereby only the binaries are provided, without the requirement to provide the source content. While I normally am against this, an OpenBSD networking head has explained to me how there would be usecases where this would be useful - if only to provide the commercial breathing space for niche projects. I probably should stop paraphrasing this person now. Jonathan McHugh indieterminacy@libre.brussels