Ed Davies is a user on octodon.social. You can follow them or interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse. If you don't, you can sign up here.

Ed Davies @edavies@octodon.social

@meredith_matthews @HerraBRE @bob I admit I haven't had the patience to put up with more than the minimum of actually using Git. I keep reading articles about it hoping for enlightenment but still haven't seen anything compelling it has that Mercurial doesn't.

@HerraBRE @bob @meredith_matthews Not knowing any better, I'm willing to concede that Git's probably better for large codebases like the kernel but for most projects Mercurial would be way less confusing for the same practical functionality.

It'd be interesting to understand the reasons Git took off the way it did and Mercurial is so much in the shadows. Is it just Github? Seems to me Git popularity came first. Just fashion? I don't know.

@marijn How do you know it's incompetence? After all, as a browser supplier they can probably manage compatibility if they try.

@deshipu My first thought was artillery shell electronics but sensitivity to mantis shrimps seems more like it. ;-)

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orders_o

@micahflee Every society has a few fringe nutters. Meanwhile the BNP has been wiped out in the local council elections and UKIP has lost most of its seats.

@upshotknothole @espectalll @micahflee Yes, of course the signing needs to be done on the user's machine. It needs to be part of the web protocols and browser functionality.

(Which brings us back to Qubes - the VM you toot from needs access to at least a low-grade signing key so probably ought to be separate from the one you do most of your browsing on.)

Moon rising over the Beatrice Bravo platform.

@upshotknothole @espectalll @micahflee Exactly, the hosting provider could fiddle with the documents easily.

Toots ought to be signed, too.

Ed Davies boosted

@espectalll @micahflee Hmm, yes, I suppose it's possible some Qubes users will actually do that.

But, more generally, it does show a rather gaping hole in standard web infrastructure in that there's no general mechanism to convey and check the original author's signature on web pages.

@espectalll @micahflee Hmm, yes, I suppose it's possible some Qubes users will actually do that.

But, more generally, it does show a rather gaping hole in standard web infrastructure in that there's no general mechanism to convey and check the original author's signature on web pages.

@Laurelai Electricity, not energy. Electricity is typically only about 1/6th of a country's energy use. Maybe a bit more in France, I'm not sure, but still a relatively small proportion. / @boneidol

Done the floor for the east end of the house slowed down by easterly winds: edavies.me.uk/2018/04/bedroom-

So, now I'm doing the floor at the west end, can you guess which direction the wind's gone round to?

@ND3JR @mwlucas US and UK politicians who want to go back to the 18th and 19th centuries are typically amongst the wealthy and know perfectly well what history teaches: in such circumstances the wealthy are disproportionately better off.

@pl @HerraBRE @webmind Thanks, was already using set -e but adding -u (unset variables treated as an error) looks useful, too.

@HerraBRE @webmind “Oh, and keeping track of whether you're running out of space … is left as an exercise for the reader. ”

My equivalent script ends:

df -h $DEST
umount $DEST

@_tj @mwlucas Thanks, that looks useful - just read a few pages and bookmarked for next time I want to do anything with video.

@_tj @mwlucas Then write an ffmpeg Mastery book for the rest of us.

@technomancy The Atom feed on your website is a bit broken; it has doctype declarations in the HTML which makes it not-well-formed XML. E.g.

<title>185</title>
<content type="html">',
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>

Actually, all the HTML tags, etc, should be escaped: RFC4287 3.1.1.2.

@deshipu It's not simple, though; 200 years or more ago the spellings of those two words were generally the other way round - though spelling was less homogeneous then anyway.

It's understandable that people think “it's” is possessive given the use of apostrophe “s” on nouns for that though “his” and “hers” ought to be a clue.

“One's” is just evil.

edavies.me.uk/2011/04/its/