cheap ≠ free Making nice things is difficult and time-consuming.
If we want people to make nice things for us, we have to pay for their rent and grocery bills and raw materials.
If you are spending less than $1 per hour on your entertainment (podcasts, videos, articles, games, books, etc.), consider finding ways to support creators and the infrastructure that supports them.
SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 year ago
I want to have empathy for this viewpoint, but dogging on HTML as being a difficult markup language is… comical?
HTML literally continues to be one of the easiest markup languages to learn.
Also, this person has clearly not heard of HTMX.
It’s a good ethos, but it really seems like it’s asking for the world on a silver platter. Don’t let perfect be the enemy of good, you know?
Finally, if we’re talking about the web being accessible, when are we going to start talking about fucking ownership of hardware and connections? Even if we own our own servers, we’re still using infrastructure to send data over that is owned by private companies.
How is open software “freeing” us if we’re still doing it all on someone else’s property?
BearOfaTime@lemm.ee 1 year ago
Lol, I love that XKCD. I like using it for all the people clamoring for regulation to make all messengers interoperate.
fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
| HTML literally continues to be one of the easiest markup languages to learn.
Is it easier than PowerPoint, LibreOffice, etc to make and distribute?
I saw this because I would love to stick to document types that I could cleanly store in git for documentation, but besides the devs, everyone else gets bogged down by it.