deadsuperhero

joined 4 years ago
[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 months ago (1 children)

While I think shareholders can be a driving factor, I see it way more often with VC-funded companies. The "2.5x year over year" growth mantra that places like YCombinator stipulate have disastrous effects on small tech companies. Often, these startups have an incentive to keep taking additional funding rounds, which appears to tighten the grip the VC has over them.

Try growing the next Microsoft or Google or Amazon out of that model. I'm not convinced that it's possible. At least if you bootstrap your own company, you don't have the same binding obligations...even if it takes way longer to get to a place that's self-sustaining.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (2 children)

Honestly, this really resonated with me. Running an open source project on its own can be hard, running a popular one that gets used by tons of people and companies, while giving free labor, is extremely hard. Acting as free tech support to a large company, for nothing in return, is ass. Full stop.

I've seen some people make the statement that "maintainers owe you nothing", and I've seen people state that "your supporters owe you nothing."

While I believe there's nothing wrong in a person willingly running a project on their own terms, just as there's nothing wrong with refusing donations and doing the work out of some kind of passion... there's only so many hours in the day, and developers need to feed themselves and pay rent.

I think a lot of people would love to be able to work on open source full-time. I'd devote all of my energy and focus to it, if I could. But, that's a reality only for a privileged few, and many of them still have to make compromises. The CEO and founder of Mastodon, for example, makes a pittance compared to what a corporate junior developer makes.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Sentry also did this by embracing the Business Source License. Technically, you can still get an MIT-licensed version, but it has to be more than two years old.

As a former employee that worked there during the days that Sentry really promoted itself being Open Source, it was disappointing to see. VC Funding and a growth obsession basically poisoned the well.

 

EDIT: This has been fixed, it all mostly chalked up to possibly a driver / kernel bug. Why things managed to work so well for so long, who can say? Anyway all you need to do is upgrade your Linux kernel to 6.5.x, and your Mesa driver to the latest Mesa git.

Hey all,

I've been playing Starfield for the last two weeks, mostly been having a great time with it! I'm using the latest kisak mesa drivers and ProtonGE, and it's been a smooth and stable experience for the most part.

However...within the last two days, I've started having a major issue. Any time I land on a planet and exit my ship, the loading screen hangs, and I get kicked back to my OS'es login screen (Ubuntu Studio 23.04). The audio continues to play, not in a staggered way, but as if the game was still running. And yet, my desktop has no idea about the executable being active.

I dunno if a patch came out within the last day or so that fundamentally changed something, or maybe my hardware's just finally started melting after weeks of playing. Performance is degraded out of nowhere.

What's curious is that, every time I reload my save, the game runs fine from within my ship. But, if I try to travel to another planet, or exit out of my landing bay, everything I've just described happens all over again. This seems to happen regardless of whether the game is windowed, borderless, medium graphics settings, low graphics settings.

I decided to check whether my hardware was just straight-up melting. It's not. My other Proton titles that are relatively heavy (Returnal, Resident Evil 4, The Callisto Protocol) all run smoothly at higher graphics settings.

Some specs info:

  • Operating System: Ubuntu Studio 23.04
  • KDE Plasma Version: 5.27.4
  • KDE Frameworks Version: 5.104.0
  • Qt Version: 5.15.8
  • Kernel Version: 6.2.0-1013-lowlatency (64-bit)
  • Graphics Platform: X11
  • Processors: 32 × AMD Ryzen 9 7950X 16-Core Processor
  • Memory: 62.5 GiB of RAM
  • Graphics Processor: AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT
  • Manufacturer: ASUS

Also, software:

  • ProtonGE: GE-Proton-8-15
  • OpenGL core profile version string: 4.6 (Core Profile) Mesa 23.1.8 - kisak-mesa PPA
  • OpenGL version string: 4.6 (Compatibility Profile) Mesa 23.1.8 - kisak-mesa PPA
  • OpenGL ES profile version string: OpenGL ES 3.2 Mesa 23.1.8 - kisak-mesa PPA-
[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago

God, that book sucked. I read it out of curiosity, but it was trash.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 11 months ago (2 children)

Just cross your arms, smile wryly, and comment on how pathetic the Interviewer's pen is. Cheap material, runny ink, a grip that's painful to hold. Wish him good luck in taking notes on subsequent interviews.

Then lean in, and say "But, you know? I've got a premium writing utensil. It's crafted in the Netherlands by a Space Age engineering firm. It's designed to fit comfortably between your fingers. And the Indian ink that runs through it glistens and glides smoothly through a specially crafted tip."

Pull out a business card with absolutely beautiful handwriting on it. Just as he expresses surprise and interest, sigh and say "But... It's really not for you. It's really more of a thing for your boss, or your boss's boss."

Start getting up to leave, and wait for him to come running after you.