• 6 Posts
  • 96 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 15th, 2023

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  • eyy@lemm.eetoAsk Lemmy@lemmy.worldHow many communities do you have blocked?
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    6 months ago

    I mostly use All as well. I have the following blocked:

    • all the meme communities that pop up. It’s just spammy posts

    • all beehaw communities. Mostly because they were defederated with the largest lemmy communities, and I didn’t want to talk to only a small subset of users. Not sure if they’ve changed anything since

    • hexbear because… Hexbear







  • I haven’t seen any ads, so my feelings about Windows might change at some point. But I’ve tried linux in the past, and there’s a reason why it just doesn’t get as much adoption.

    First of all, linux seems to be built around the command line. I hate using the command line, and I’m sure I’m not the only one. Everytime there’s something to troubleshoot I have to figure out command line inputs and outputs.

    Second, the annoying issues with windows are annoying, but I’ve learnt to figure it out. No, I don’t want to set as default, no I don’t want to send data, no i don’t want to create a MS account. Even if I didn’t figure it out, I can still change it later - sending data is annoying af and i don’t like it, but it doesn’t stop me from doing something. On the other hand, i encounter issues with linux that stop me from actually using the OS all the time. Everytime I do, I have to post in forums asking for help, wait 12-36 hours while using an alternate OS/workaround, and dread the inevitable use of command-line that follows.







  • Most cobol systems have more code that doesn’t do anything vs code that actually does something.

    What values do variables ROBERT1, ROBERT2 and ROBERT3 hold? Whatever ROBERT wanted.

    And when that system is storing high-risk and/or sensitive data, do you really want to be the person who deletes code that you think “actually does nothing”, only to find out it somehow stopped another portion of code from breaking?

    The reason why these things still exist is business laziness. They don’t know and don’t care what cobol is or isn’t doing.

    That’s the thing - tor a risk-averse industry (most companies running COBOL systems belong here), being the guy who architected the move away from COBOL is a high-risk, high-stress job with little immediate rewards. At best, the move goes seamlessly, and management knows you as “the guy who updated our OS or something and saved us some money but took a few years to do it, while Bob updated our HR system and saved a bunch of money in 1 year”. At worst, you accidentally break something, and now you have a fiasco on your hands.