Assigning your copyright to the FSF helps defend the GPL and keep software free. Thanks to Ignacio Ruiz Cejudo, Johan Sternerup, Rens Oliemans, Robert Burks, Sergei Golovin, and Toshihiro Umehara for assigning their copyright to the FSF! #GDB#Emacs#GNUAstro#GNUstep More: https://u.fsf.org/3ht#CopyrightAssignments
Assigning your copyright to the FSF helps defend the GPL and keep software free. Thanks to Ignacio Ruiz Cejudo, Johan Sternerup, Rens Oliemans, Robert Burks, Sergei Golovin, and Toshihiro Umehara for assigning their copyright to the FSF! #GDB#Emacs#GNUAstro#GNUstep More: https://u.fsf.org/3ht#CopyrightAssignments
Assigning your copyright to the FSF helps defend the GPL and keep software free. Thanks to Ignacio Ruiz Cejudo, Johan Sternerup, Rens Oliemans, Robert Burks, Sergei Golovin, and Toshihiro Umehara for assigning their copyright to the FSF! #GDB#Emacs#GNUAstro#GNUstep More: https://u.fsf.org/3ht#CopyrightAssignments
Assigning your copyright to the FSF helps defend the GPL and keep software free. Thanks to Ignacio Ruiz Cejudo, Johan Sternerup, Rens Oliemans, Robert Burks, Sergei Golovin, and Toshihiro Umehara for assigning their copyright to the FSF! #GDB#Emacs#GNUAstro#GNUstep More: https://u.fsf.org/3ht#CopyrightAssignments
What is the best way to learn #ObjectiveC on Linux?
At some point in the future I want to get a feel for the language. I'm not so fussed about learning Cocoa and the Foundation framework. I'm more interested in the syntax and structure.
I need something with a solid set of tutorials, without using a Mac.
Is #GNUstep the best option? Are there any good tutorials for #ObjFW?
I've been playing with the #WindowMaker version of #Debian recently, just to remember the old, good #NextSTEP, #OpenSTEP era. I used to have a #NeXTStation but I sold it locally for $300 just before I left US for Greece. It could probably fetch thousands on eBay, but I didn't want to deal with shipping such a heavy item.
Ah, I miss the old #SiliconValley. Back when there was actually room to innovate in ways that were revolutionary, and not just additive.
I think the danger in pulling out of the EU market is that a lot of (I guess) highly skilled EU people would work hard to produce a reasonable replacement. Which might actually become a EU success story if you think about it.
@Gte WS will probably feel differently, but I doubt it'll have a huge impact since Apple will still be the one company with massive profits elsewhere.
But I wouldn't call the other thing "long term". If Europeans really have no access to Apple devices anymore, they will have to switch to alternatives rather ASAP. And I bet there will be a huge push to make those better. E.g. I'd certainly would want to have something comparable to an iPhone software wise 🙂 Hail #GNUstep 🙂
Spent some time playing around with #NextStep on infinitemac.org
I totally forgot how incredibly clean that GUI was. It didn't at all feel like a throwback, but rather, a beautiful upgrade to the interfaces we have now.
They did more with 4 shades of gray and 1120x832 than we do with 16 million colors and 4k.
It made me want to try running #GNUStep and #WindowMaker again, but even that isn't quite the same.
Hi, all. I built #Emacs with the --with-ns GUI option on #GNUStep. It looks pretty nice! Don't mind the slow startup time; this is on an eeePC from 2012. This is otherwise with just the default GNUStep install on #Debian.