I really like reading text with variable-width fonts. Gemini requires fixed-width fonts due to its terminal-based approach. Thus, I have no desire to use it ever.
I've only dabbled in Gemini so I don't know their names off the top of my head, but I tried out a number of GUI Gemini browsers in the past, and they're quite nice. Easy on the eyes, simple design, all the variable width fonts you could ask for if that's your bag.
It is hand to remember a few finger/knuckles/elbow/shoulder combinations for common measures. One of your phalanges should be ~1 inch, for example, and one of your finger nails is probably ~1 cm wide.
There's a reason that the English system of measurement had things like "hand" and "foot" - because when you're not measuring things exactly, close enough and commonly available is fine.
The bait and switch was around the “free” license for non-commercial use. They got lots of people using it and porting software to it, and then they revoked that free license.
Then they did exactly the same thing again a few years later.
And now, for the 3rd time, they are offering a “free” non-commercial license.
Yes, that's why I've asked about possible rust support of creating such version of normal project. The main issue, I'm unaware of comparably large rust projects without 3rdparty dependencies.
I believe ripgrep has only or mostly dependencies that the main author also controls. It's structured so that ripgrep depends on regex crates by the same author, for example.
Sounds like you look for an intersection of academic papers (1.), tech blogs (2.), text books (3.), and confidential business strategies (4.)? A very high ambition.
Corporations commonly describe some of their internal processes and achievements because it builds reputation and that can be important for both sales and recruitment.
Sometimes they do it in the form of free or open source software releases.
At work my machine has probably ten or more installations of Python hidden in various tools. I'm certainly not alone. So we could say "on average Python is installed on every machine". /s
With a secure enclave or an HSM, there's a secret, but the users do not have access to the secret. So, if you have a workflow that needs to, say, sign with a given private key, you would get an API that signs for you. If you need to open a TLS connection with a client certificate, you get a proxy that authenticates for you.
I suppose I would make an exception for license keys. Those have minimal blast radii if they leak.
reply