> Now if any of the people posting the rage stuff want to actually review any of the code I’ve published and make constructive criticisms then that would be great!
When you quickly churn more lines of code in a few days than you changed in months, and then release them as a normal, not sure you're expecting "constructive criticism"
Also if I suspect the project is just slopping high amount of code without proper thought, I probably won't invest my time into reading those changes
Atheists are a community of not, practically anti-religion or anti-god activists. Not sure that is even controversial. Sometimes Democrats are pro-left policies, right now they are anti-trump activists. And a lot of communities depending on the environment end up more pro-A or anti-B. Even if members of the community believe in mixed thing the movement direction has still to be opposites. Left, Right, Linux, Windows, Wayland, X11, GPL, MIT, IPV4, IPV6, SystemD, dinit, Docker, Podman, Rust, C++, Go, Zig, C...
If a trusted project starts changing several lines of code a day, breaking things, with or without llms, there will be backlash
And Rsync should rightly loose reputation if they're breaking the software to get in the latest trend hype
Best/easiest is probably virt-manager, with 2 GPUs, a cheaper one for the host
And you can swap between linux and windows VMs, or copy them to test things, break/fix it
I have a light Devuan linux host. And several QEMU VMs on top, one Win10 for gaming, one linux PopOS as a "server" with docker and llms, and other VMs..
First it caused lots of issues. And didn't deliver anything significant
But the biggest issue has always been architectural, the way systemd keeps absorbing existing projects, and functionality. That keep adding to the more than 1 million lines of C monolith, that can burden progress in the futre
But as long people can replace any of systemd tool, for a tool they like better, all good
Personally I am now using desktop/server distros without systemd, and there is nothing that I miss, everything works... cuda/llama.cpp/steam/docker...
And commands always have to google them anyway, or find in history...
When you quickly churn more lines of code in a few days than you changed in months, and then release them as a normal, not sure you're expecting "constructive criticism"
Also if I suspect the project is just slopping high amount of code without proper thought, I probably won't invest my time into reading those changes
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