home.social

Aleksandra Fedorova :fedora:

  1. Apparently, #Discourse has just landed the nested replies support

    github.com/discourse/discourse

    It can be previewed on meta.discourse.org if you replace `/t/` with `/n/` in the thread url.

    For ex.
    meta.discourse.org/n/im-writin

    I think the default theme is too white and makes the thread structure hard to recognize.

    But I am looking forward to the future adjustments.

  2. Wait, wait, wait, am I seeing things?

    Servo 0.0.6-d3c39bb68

    With --enable-experimental-web-platform-features flag

    Thanks @lwn for reminder.

    #Servo #Cockpit

  3. Introducing #bootc support in the Anaconda installer - new article by our team on Fedora Magazine.

    This is the early preview of the feature, which has been recently merged to the Fedora Rawhide.

    Feedback is welcome

    fedoramagazine.org/introducing

  4. @fehlfarbe @flxtr @zwol @pluto

    <something here> yet we persist
    <something else> antifashist

    Sounds like a good template.

    Also not saying "antifa" may be an advantage..

    #antifasticker

  5. Which #TuneD profile is the closest to

    "I am playing a game on X1 Carbon laptop with integrated Intel Graphics on a hot summer day":

    - throughput-performance
    - accelerator-performance
    - desktop
    - balanced

    ?

  6. If anyone is interested in contributing to FOSS projects (as everyone here as a lot of free time, right?)

    it would be really cool to adjust this change review.opendev.org/c/zuul/zuul to support #Forgejo and to land it in #ZuulCI

    #openinfra

  7. If you are in need of a slightly creepy but at the same time cozy and not very demanding game, which will let you switch off from the reality for next couple of days and just go fishing(literally), I can recommend

    gog.com/en/game/dredge_complet

    As usual: runs on Thinkpad X1 Carbon, on Fedora 41, installed via Lutris, no DRM, no issues.

  8. And no, don't come close to me with your books or certificates. You are already broken.

  9. jira.atlassian.com/browse/BAM-

    I am watching this ticket since 2013. Every couple of years I get a notification about some poor soul asking the same question again. And it triggers nostalgic feelings about the world long gone.

    If you ever wondered, if Bamboo by is worth anything as a build or ci system, it is not.

    That was my first job as a Build Engineer and the best thing I did was that I deployed server and moved our test automation to it.

  10. I have been a huge fan of Zuul CI (zuul-ci.org/) for many years. And it keeps being amazing every time I interact with it.

    There is a learning curve, especially since the field is dominated by proprietary and locked CI services. We need more stackoverflow, community blogs and so on. But once you pass that, you just would never want to go back.

    This is what the peak Infra As A Code and Open By Design setup looks like and I wish more services were designed that way.

  11. @creepy_owlet @zhenech

    As you maybe noticed, I am a huge supporter of Zuul CI as an open-source, vendor agnostic CI service, which can connect to any of Git Forges (GitLab, GitHub, Pagure, Gerrit, Gitea) and any of the resource providers (static hosts, AWS, OpenStack, Azure, K8s..) at the same time and be managed through a well known standard interface: Ansible.

    And I wish people start seeing value in the interoperability in CI

  12. @creepy_owlet @zhenech

    When you develop the service itself, it is Python.

    Once Zuul is set up and deployed - it becomes 100% Ansible

    In Fedora and CentOS Stream we use managed Zuul provided to us by the
    Software Factory project (softwarefactory-project.io) So they take all the burden of maintaining it.

    And we mostly care about playbooks and Ansible roles.

    For example the mock-build job:
    pagure.io/zuul-distro-jobs/blo

  13. Dear FOSS-community, can we figure out the federated approach to events calendar?

    I see that there is a thingy, which looks promising.

    So I wonder if there are already folks from , , , , .. etc looking into it, and what needs to be done so that we all can find each other?

  14. What's the point of creating smooth transitions, maintaining layers of compatibility, keeping two things work in parallel and giving people time to learn new ways of doing things, if they only start to learn those new ways when all of that old deprecated functionality is finally removed?

    And then complain how "suddenly" they have to do a hard switch to a new technology without any leeway.

    That leeway has been given to you 5 years ago, you used it all for nothing!