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Well, here in BG it is hard to find French wine. There's plenty of Italian, Spanish, Chilean and Argentinian wine.

And also a healthy percent of local Bulgarian wine.


As far as my limited knowledge of linguistics goes, the technical term is actually "collocations."

To me, any discussion of this topic that doesn't mention collocations signals an amateurish approach.

I also disagree with the premise that "this was not possible before LLM." That's nonsense. Linguists created many dictionaries of collocations for different languages, so that work is precisely what they did!

(Before any LLM zealots attack me, yes, it is now possible to have a more exhaustive list of collocations thanks to LLMs. This doesn't contradict my point.)

Examples of collocation dictionaries:

https://www.freecollocation.com/

https://ozdic.com/.


AIUI, collocations are just "words that often go together". It doesn't signal any unconventional meaning to the construction, that would make it a proper idiom.

If that were the case, there would be no need for collocation dictionaries :)

Fair point — added a mention of collocations

Good. This means the market is healthy.

Hopefully this also means new providers appear in Europe, to handle the increase in demand.


Oh no. I both hate and love this at the same time.

Cloudflare seems to be taking over all of the last mile web traffic, and this extreme centralization sounds really bad to me.

We should be able to achieve close to the same results with some configuration changes.

AWS / Azure / Cloudflare total centralization means no one will be able to self host anything, which is exactly the point of this post.


It's an archaic relic of the Unix era.

The reason it is being removed is precisely because now we are in the Linux era, no longer in the Unix era.

Have another vote in favour of OpenRC, and even Upstart, if it somehow revives.


The most stable Linux API is Wine/Win32.

There are many older games I can't install on Linux anymore, because they used an older SDL1 or some particular X11 version or some GPU driver that's no longer available for the current kernel.

The exact same game, Windows version, can be installed and runs flawlessly on both Linux and Windows.

So, native Vulkan executables? Sure, if they can continue to run in 20 years.


Those games did weird things. Every distro still ships SDL1, x11 didn’t really break API, and requiring a specific driver is obviously broken from the start. I won’t say none of this happens but the platform isn’t to blame there.


Even glibc breaks ABI. The linux userspace ABI is too unstable and games don't have to be doing weird things to hit it.


I never understood why glibc needs to break ABI. It should not be allowed to. Ever.

You are not reinventing the wheel. Just maintain the damn thing and keep it running as is. As Linus once said "If there's a bug that people rely on, it's not a bug, it's a feature.".


Valve is working on this problem for native Linux games: https://gitlab.steamos.cloud/steamrt/steamrt/-/blob/steamrt/...

This is a similar idea to flatpak/snap etc.


Just like for OS/2, what a great success it was.


It's a different situation, OS/2 was significantly more expensive than Windows, Linux is free.


os/2 2.1 was free during some periods in the 90s, I and several friends got it just for the free floppies. Though none of us paid for windows either, I guess it was free as well.


The development tools for OS/2 were worse and far more expensive.


It’s working right now, what are you arguing against.


It seems to be working, that is the thing building castles in foreign kingdoms.


What do you mean? There is a whole library of thousands of win32 games spanning more than 2 decades and the community is tracking and reporting bugs in each and classifying their level of performance.

That’s one of the most successful computer projects I’ve heard of.


Sure, if one ignores all the existing emulators for previous computer generations, and game consoles.


If you want hardware emulation you can use a vm like virtual box…

I don’t even know what you’re arguing now.


There are a lot of older games that won't run on windows 11 as well. In fact most of my games no longer work on windows 11.

Your point?


I still have a couple of brain games I use from the Win 3.11 era.

And they run fine.


Yeah? Most? So like what?


So targeting windows isn't stable either? Which is why GOG even exists.


I'm asking what your game library is full of if most can't run on windows 11.


directX 5 :)


It should use some modern alternative, no old bash scripts.

Even the defunct Upstart is better than what's in Devuan.


It seems protesting a dictatorship, of whatever kind, is pointless and dangerous.

Meaning, the people should be able to defend themselves against the violence directed to them.


> It seems protesting a dictatorship, of whatever kind, is pointless and dangerous.

Dangerous, probably but they can't stop us all. Pointless? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Revolution, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Revolution.


Well, those are examples of revolutions against entities which were definitely not dictatorships. The British parliament stopped fighting the Americans over the objection of the King.


I was trying to SUBTLY IMPLY they should be armed against the regime. Also, that they should do something different than protesting. While protesting, people become targets.

I suppose subtlety doesn't work with you.

A fighter against the regime who is alive is more valuable than the corpse of a protestor. That's simply logistics, you fake Cthulhu.


Britain and France were not dictatorships. Also, those are from over 200 years ago, having a more recent example might be helpful.


> Meaning, the people should be able to defend themselves against the violence directed to them.

Yes. But not just and not mainly from your government: you are way more likely to get killed by criminals and/or terrorists then by law enforcement officers.

To put things in perspectice in the US there are more than 20 000 homicides per year.

And for women rape and rape attempts are scary, here are the numbers for the UK:

https://www.statista.com/statistics/283100/recorded-rape-off...

You cannot really compare 36 000+ people getting killed by an islamist regime that rules the country by sharia law with the number of people killed by law enforcement officers in, say, France or the US. Where the number of people being killed by officials, yearly, can be counted on one hand's fingers.

In the same vein, you cannot really compared terror attacks like the 2024 one in Russia where 145 people where killed in a theater or the 130 people killed by terrorists at the Bataclan in France or the 70 killed in Nice (my sister was there with her two kids that day and she saw the terrorist and her son is still, to this day, traumatized) with the number of people getting killed by law enforcement officers in a country like France or the US (I'm using these two as an example for they are country where, each year, a few people are killed by law enforcement officers).

Unarmed people vs terrorists with kalashnikovs: slaughter.

A great many are highly concerned, for example, that there are now sleeping islamists terrorists cells in the EU. Even mainstream media began reporting the concerns. There are regularly arrests and terrorists plots foiled. And Christmas markets and celebrations have been cancelled this year in many european cities because the risk of islamist terror attacks were too high.

When a country disarms its people, it doesn't just make them vulnerable to the governement's wrongdoings: it makes them vulnerables to criminals and terrorists too. Which, so far in the western world, is definitely a much bigger threat.

Now that said there are more than 10 billion ammo sold, each year, in the US, to civilians. If there's one country where either the government or the terrorists would have a problem should they go "all in", it's the US.


>Yes. But not just and not mainly from your government: you are way more likely to get killed by criminals and/or terrorists then by law enforcement officers.

That's not true globally; in the 20th century governments in Russia, Germany, China and Cambodia collectively killed over a hundred million of their own people.

>it makes them vulnerables to criminals and terrorists too. Which, so far in the western world, is definitely a much bigger threat.

Germany is the western world. Many of six million Jews would probably still be around if they'd been well-armed.


How many poles died?

They had a literal military. This absurdist belief that something like the 2nd amendment would have ANY impact is literal propaganda.

Find me an oppressive government overthrown with private firearm ownership.


At this point I wish that there was some native alternative to the Web-based everything.

wxWidgets is oldschool, QT has license issues, GTK looks so-so except on Linux, TCL/TK looks ugly everywhere.

In the modern world we need some GPU accelerated GUI library. Something like the one used in SublimeText. But with BSD or MIT license of course.

That would be much more interesting for me.


> wxWidgets is oldschool

It's a bit sad that a GUI library absolutely needs to be new and shining to be even considered nowadays, it looks like the whole programming world got infected by JS ecosystem anything-that-is-more-than-3-months-old-is-obsolete mindset.

The old that is strong does not wither.


In principle, I totally agree with you.

As someone who has used it and preferred WX over QT for Windows based programs, the issue is not in the look and feel of the final product itself.

It's the heavy use of C style macros instead of C++ templates, mostly.

The WX C++ code looks like Microsoft Foundation Classes. I am fine with it, but for a long term project, this could discourage new people joining the project.


> I wish that there was some native alternative to the Web-based everything.

I suggest Slint (https://slint.dev)


Thank you for the heads-up. It seems good enough to at least make some proof of concept project and learn it.


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