They invited that guy back. I do have to admit, I admire his inability to read a room.

You are viewing a single thread.
View all comments View context
7 points

beyond anything technical, the question that’s been burning up my hope is:

why in fuck was this such an easy win for the techfash shitheads operating in the open?

seriously. these fuckers employed the most obvious tactics imaginable to damage the Nix community beyond repair, and it worked. it wasn’t even hard for them to come fuck up the only enjoyable tool I use.

and hardly anybody even managed to tell them no in a way that fucking mattered. the Nix governance changes were an obvious ploy that everybody fucking bought into! and I thought I was being fucking unfair for thinking this’d be the exact outcome!

and somehow, after all this bullshit happening in the open, there’s no viable fork? Aux got right to the edge of it — one of my systems ran auxpkgs without much trouble — then they let a bunch of bad faith assholes steer the project away from that, and now I don’t know what Aux is, but it’s not focused enough for me to contribute to.

the only ones who successfully said no were Lix, so the Nix language will survive! and as you pointed out, as it is right now that’s not great. it’s a lot like elisp — it’s janky as fuck but there’s a couple things it does uniquely well. unfortunately, the folks in control of nixpkgs control the Nix standard library, and they’d prefer the language remains obscure and janky. in short, these fucking jackasses want Nix to become as hard to use as Urbit, because it’s very easy to turn a priesthood of experts with obscure knowledge into a right-wing think tank. I’m sure it works even better if, unlike with Urbit, the underlying technology actually fucking works.

permalink
report
parent
reply

FreeAssembly

!freeasm@awful.systems

Create post

this is FreeAssembly, a non-toxic design, programming, and art collective. post your share-alike (CC SA, GPL, BSD, or similar) projects here! collaboration is welcome, and mutual education is too.

in brief, this community is the awful.systems answer to Hacker News. read this article for a solid summary of why having a less toxic collaborative community is important from a technical standpoint in addition to a social one.

some posting guidelines apply in addition to the typical awful.systems stuff:

  • all types of passion projects and contributions are welcome, including and especially those that aren’t programming or engineering in nature
  • this is an explicitly noncommercial, share-alike space
  • don’t force yourself to do work you don’t enjoy, or demand it of others

(logo credit, with modifications by @dgerard@awful.systems)

Community stats

  • 11

    Monthly active users

  • 20

    Posts

  • 249

    Comments

Community moderators