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Maybe it's just me, but I hate the word "agentic" so much.

Sorry Spotify, but if it's AI-generated then by [my] definition it's "slop." We - or at least I - don't want AI music, we don't care about your AI. I'm just so tired of hearing about AI and new AI stuff.

Also, one of my friends uses Suno to make "music" and put it on YouTube, and I just don't have the heart to tell him it's "slop" and I've never/won't listen to it.


I have a small collection of programming/technology books, some from O'Reilly, others from Manning and No Starch Press. I've read them and they have been very helpful, but I will admit that I been buying less books. They take up space, and my shelves are full of these and other books like novels and manga.

Also, now when I am trying to learn a language, I just work on a project and search in the docs (or just on Kagi) to find what I am trying to do. Maybe a physical book would be a quicker reference, and maybe I should buy some more of them.

P.S. I enjoy finding old computer books (like DOS/Win95 era) at the thrift store.


This has nothing to do with the article posted or anything, I was just curious... who gets to pick the animal on the book cover? Do you (the author) get to pick, or does the publisher (O'Reilly) pick?

Do you mean the animal in general, or what specific image? For Go specifically, it would be very surprising if it was not a gopher! Ok, Python is obviously even more closely associated with the snake, but a gopher has been the Go mascot from the very beginning (the original design being drawn by the wife of one of the language's co-creators)...

I meant in general.

For whatever reason, I forgot that Go uses a gopher as its mascot. But like, their PHP books don't use an elephant.

I dunno, I was just curious if the author could pick an animal to be on the cover, or if it wasn't their choice.


For Go it had to be a Gopher (as it is the mascot for the language). My editor showed me the artwork and I approved it.

Are we still talking about ads?

Of course. It seems like an illustration of who's getting F-ed

That's actually what I thought this submission was. Didn't remember what it was called, so I didn't realize PhotoGIMP wasn't GIMPshop.


It's funny that both of these kept GIMP in the name when the name itself has spawend a different fork.


I remember one renamed Glimpse but it seems they stopped working on it long ago: https://github.com/azubieta/Glimpse


Yes, none of the forks have succeeded so PS interface compatibility may not be as important as is constantly mentioned.


Now that's just kooky! Sorry, I had to.


I remember using download managers back in the day, and by "back in the day" I mean dial-up (and maybe early DSL). I liked being able to pause downloads and possibly split them up using multiple connections.

Nowadays, are download managers even needed anymore? At least for me, the internet is fast enough that I don't need a separate download manager, plus browsers support the pausing (and maybe multiple connections?) feature already.

I'm just curious why someone would need to use JDownloader.

EDIT: I hadn't thought about "warez" sites in a while and sites like megaupload where you had to wait for a timer. Those are totally "valid" uses for a downloader like this, thanks.


There's quite a lot of legit uses still. And also, it's not about speed, if I'm on a hotel wifi I don't want firefox giving up if I have multiple files queued up from my file server. Sure, browsers support pause/resume but they also fail pretty hard on spotty connections. With jdownloader you just set it and it'll do it's thing.

Also nice if you're manually downloading game mods, some are hosted on file lockers that make you wait so many minutes. Again, jdownloader was built for that.

I also say that as someone that really can't stand jdownloader, but the alternatives are... not great. Surge, the tui, is nice if you're just doing regular ol' http downloads.


The ‘scene’ or warez sites are still up and running. Sharing cracked softwares, movies shows etc. through file hosting services. If say you wanted a Blu-ray movie with Dolby atmos sizing near 10 gig. Then you’d queue the file sharing site download links in jdownloader and let it automatically manage these downloads for you.


I guess it's been a while since I used those type of sites. I admit that I used to, and I do remember those sites like megaupload or whatever that had a timer.


This sent me down memory lane, what happened to warez-bb!


Very much doubt scene is using downloaders these days. ftp for the groups and torrent/usenet for the plebs


There are still warez sites that upload content in RAR archives, which are then split into individual parts. A download manager can then download them all one after another instead of having to do it manually. There are also hosting sites with weird CAPTCHAs or various waiting times.


Dealing with all kinds of weird download sites is the main selling point for me. It's not just warez, you run into them in all kinds of weird places where a nontechnical person needs to share files with a larger audience (google drive etc only works for small audiences), or where somebody decides to monetize by making a couple cents off your download.

With JDownloader you just throw the link in there, and the software deals with mandatory wait times, captchas, throttled downloads, "you exceeded your downloads for today, come back in 24 hours", etc. JDownloader makes sure it eventually succeeds without me having to baby-sit the process


Fair enough. I do remember using those sites back in the day, and the `.rar.000`, `.rar.001` file lists (or was it `.part1.rar`, `.part2.rar`?). I guess I haven't visited or thought about those sites in a while.


Used it once to pirate Infinity Train because someone put the episodes on MEGA.


Not everyone have fast enough networks, there are places where people find it lucky to download something that is more than 2 GiBs without finding it to fail suddenly.


https://www.halupedia.com/blink-182

> Blink 182 is a species of subterranean fungus that exhibits a peculiar, rhythmic photoluminescence.

Sounds right to me.


Last night on AEW Dynamite [1], Tony Schiavone and Sting had some very nice things to say about Ted Turner. I didn't know he'd died until then. They both talked about how Ted started WCW and how he defended pro wrestling when certain execs wanted to cancel it.

[1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bXSILHvWe0


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