I don't do a lot of important work outside of my own hobbies, and most of my repositories are not interesting or useful in their current state.
I spend most of my time on GitHub working on cool little scripts and programs for Ubuntu.
I will often come to a random GitHub repository, report a bug or fix a typo (usually the latter) and then disappear somewhere else. My outside work is almost entirely non-committal (literal meaning, not as in git commits).
I am often excessively frank in my communications and appear more rude than I usually intend to.
My friends sometimes describe me as a realistic person, and I don't entirely disagree.
I have done minor outside work for a variety of notable projects, including but not limited to:
- Canonical
- HandBrake
- TurboWarp
- Ocular
- Yacy
- Pencil2D
- EasyList
Projects that I work on include:
- MiniGuinea (an adblocker with none of the nonsense, along with a permissive MIT-style license agreement)
- homemade_yes (the GNU
yescommand but slightly faster on some machines; written in ~30 lines of Rust) - yes_installer (a script to quickly install and manage a copy of homemade_yes)
- Jameson (a programming language for people who liked Scratch before it started paywalling stuff)
- https://mojavesoft.net and its mirror site https://mojavesoft.org (website for cool people)
If someone uses a badly-constructed lock on their house, they probably left an open window somewhere.
Don't bother with the lock. See what you can do with the window.
If you're a software developer: build it and the bad actors will come.
If a change results in user programs breaking, it's a bug in the kernel. We never EVER blame the user programs. How hard can this be to understand? (source)
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