Of course don’t let me dissuade you. My wife would much prefer a robo mower with “normal” lawn over a no-lawn solution
Torn. This is clearly a cool idea, and it would save a lot of work (which I would immediately offset with all the work putting it together) But then it will be that much easier to keep a traditional lawn going, which I’d love to get away from over the long term.
Looks cool, thanks for sharing.
Thanks for commenting!
Not being familiar with the subject matter, reading this made almost no sense to me
I know very little about contributing to open source but appreciated reading this. Seems like often the interpersonal element is the biggest challenge and the author handled it well.
It’s big for sales people too - I research who is the right person to contact at an organization, and also to find out what they’ve been up to lately that might be useful in a sales pitch.
Well you know, “quantity has a quality all its own”
I just use it for snippets - “here’s my function, how would I go about changing x?” Or, “here’s my block of code, I’m getting this error, what am I missing?” (I know, I’m fine to share my code but not company code)
Not sure I follow, I don’t think this problem is inherent to Linux. Just the solution described uses Linux.
Same, would love to switch completely to an OSM based app. But my main use case currently is for hiking, the trails are usually better, and for situations where I have poor cell reception.
Mostly unrelated but I had a client who balked at our price to make changes to their conference website (a week before the event). They suggested their high school son could be given administrative access and make the updates.
It’s also good to think of other differentiators because pretty much every business offers financial incentives to win an initial contract if it means recurring revenue.
Yeah, I guess you could argue it needs more contributors, but sort of like Wikipedia, suppose it saw wide adoption. Is it just a learn to code type thing? I guess better that Wikimedia runs it than stack exchange or whoever.