90% of the developers make bad code, yes.
Either because of their lack of experience, their choice of tools, or
because of requirements set by managers who just follow the latest
trends without having any knowledge of programming themselves.
The remaining 10% are highly skilled developers providing the best user
experience, the OpenBSD, Go, Zig, and Suckless teams are among those
developers.
Thierry (the guy who made TempleOS by himself) was one of them too, but
he's no longer alive.
And Dennis (known for Unix, C, and Plan9), but he too is dead.
And some other hidden gems too, all of these people have one thing in 
common: they all keep their codebases as simple and clean as possible.

On 2023年07月18日 17:26, Ibsen S Ripsbusker wrote:
> Dear colleagues,
> 
> About 20 years ago I read in some OpenBSD documentation, likely the
> installation instructions, that we want people to copy our OpenBSD even
> if to use it even in proprietary products, because the alternative is
> that incompetent people write their own software instead of copying and
> then the users suffer. I found this particular passage to be very well
> written. Does someone know where I might find this wonderful passage?
> 
> With great honor,
> 
> Ibsen
> 

-- 
lain.

Did you know that?
90% of all emails sent on a daily basis are being sent in plain text, and it's 
super easy to intercept emails as they flow over the internet?
Never send passwords, tokens, personal information, or other volunerable 
information without proper PGP encryption!

If you're writing your emails unencrypted, please consider sending PGP 
encrypted emails for security reasons.
You can find my PGP public key at: https://fair.moe/lain.asc

Every good email client is able to send encrypted emails.
If yours can't, then you should consider switching to a secure email client, 
because yours just sucks.

My recommendations are Claws Mail or NeoMutt.
For instructions on how to encrypt your emails:
https://unixsheikh.com/tutorials/gnupg-tutorial.html

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