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#+title: My story about colorscheme
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#+date: [2020-05-03 Sun]
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#+title: Return of experience about colorscheme
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#+date: [2020-05-04 Mon]
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#+author: Yann Esposito
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#+EMAIL: yann@esposito.host
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#+KEYWORDS: colorscheme
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#+DESCRIPTION: A generalization of solarized (https://solaryzed.esy.fun).
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#+DESCRIPTION: I tried to make keep the same fundamentals and to free some variables.
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#+OPTIONS: auto-id:t toc:t
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#+DESCRIPTION: The list of colorschemes I used, why I changed.
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#+OPTIONS: auto-id:t toc:nil
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#+STARTUP: overview
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* Local variables :noexport:
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:PROPERTIES:
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:CUSTOM_ID: local-variables
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:END:
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# local variables:
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# org-download-image-dir "./img"
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# end:
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src/drafts/XXXX-who-control/index.org
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#+Title: Who is in Control
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#+Subtitle: How I started to take care of the tools I use.
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#+Author: Yann Esposito
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#+Email: yann@esposito.host
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#+Date: [2019-08-17 Sat 20:00]
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#+KEYWORDS: opinion
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#+DESCRIPTION: Modern tools disapears
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#+DESCRIPTION: I include applications, web applications, websites, editors, programming languages.
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#+LANGUAGE: en
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#+LANG: en
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#+OPTIONS: H:5 auto-id:t
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#+STARTUP: showeverything
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#+begin_notes
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This post is a reaction about a few articles I read in a short amount of time.
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So do not take that too seriously.
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But it will certainly.
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#+end_notes
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I had to work a lot this week and I mostly didn't read any news.
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This morning, I started to read the article I missed.
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Here are the articles and threads I read:
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- [[https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23102430][Zoom acquires keybase]]
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- [[https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23107123][Making Emacs popular again]]
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- [[https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23092904][Github Codespace]]
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I don't think I read those in that order.
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A few years back, HN comments made me look at Clojure.
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That was also many positive HN return of experience that made me confident
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to use it for a serious business work.
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Lot of great advices regarding every aspect of the life and software programming.
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Project architecture, etc...
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Most of the time, article were good, but HN comment were really great.
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Of course, even after a few years, people started to explain that HN
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quality dropped.
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This can totally be an observer bias.
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HN quality might not have really droped but the reader has changed.
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So I get it.
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I changed a lot accross those years.
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And also, yes, HN is mostly see by startupers.
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So this is also another big bias.
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Still, I'm sad to see that the most popular opinions expressed in those
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discussion threads have diverged so much from my point of view.
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When I see those news I see a common pattern.
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One big corp kill a product that should exist for the common good.
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And of course, each time this is because having a common product is
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incredibly hard.
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Most "common good" products do not have what it takes to be sustainable
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enough.
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Either you create a very big open-source ness of developers that give their
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work freely, or you can grab enough money from different source so you can
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pay a few of them.
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And this is why the startup model is a lot more efficient.
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You want a great product, buy the best best people.
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For that you need money and passion.
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Most /Free Software/[fn:1] must deal with community driven development.
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They should often find a concenssus.
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They generally don't have money to pay the people working on that product.
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While startup looking to create popular product must take a lot of care
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about UX and UI.
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What that mean is that the product should need the least possible amount of
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energy and learning from the users.
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And this is a great thing.
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The problem with this approach is that most of the time it also forces
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users to follow the workflow and limitations imposed to make it easy to use.
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And sometime worse, product simply disapears or change so much I simply
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didn't want to use them anymore.
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So here is a non-exhaustive list of ~/.*ware/~ that, as a user you don't
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want to deal with:
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- /bloatware/: remember digg, readitlater, stumbleupon?
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- /downgradeware/: Swagger-UI v3 (v2 is neat), reddit new redesign (looks better, but slow)
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- /payware/: You rely on our feature, but now, we want you to move or to pay. Fair ;)
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- /crapware/: Nothing works as expected unless you pay: Twitter streaming API?
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- /dieware/: Remember Friendfeed? Google Reader™?
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- etc...
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Regarding the integration of VSCode™ inside GitHub™ I think this is even worse.
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This is what I would call a /trapware/.
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#+begin_notes
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/trapware/:
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A software that is intented to put you inside a closed ecosystem.
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By slowly but surely add features that while looking great for the user at
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first sight will ensure to entrave other tools to interoperate.
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#+end_notes
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Furthermore, the fact that Microsoft is involved really give this situation a taste of [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embrace,_extend,_and_extinguish][EEE]].
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So what is the real concern for me.
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I imagine a new working environment where surveillance and control on the
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developer is a rule.
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For a startup CTO/CEO this GitHub™ full work environment offers the
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following advantages:
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- /security/: impossible or very hard to steal the code by a single dev.
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- /homogeneity/: all dev must use the same development environment. Thus
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the integration of new dev is faster.
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- /cheaper/: don't need to pay for a full featured, fast machine to each new developer.
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A simple machine able to display an electron app will do the trick.
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- /stats/: you can observe the throughput of your developers. How many
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commits a day, how many lines of code, etc...
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How much bugs involved which part of the code and thus which dev to blame?
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How much time the dev is typing, moving its mouse, how much copy/paste is
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involved, etc...
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For the single developers and open source developers this offer:
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- /homogeneity/: if I learn how to work in this environment, I'll be easier
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to recruit and I'll know how to work fast.
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- /lower barrier to entry/: for an opensource repository, it will become much
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easier for anyone to propose a PR to fix some issue. No need to local
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clone the project, no need to download all the dependencies to test it
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locally, etc...
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But the price to pay is hidden.
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1. First, you are now, not able to choose your local working environment on your machine.
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2. GitHub™ can still change so much to become one of the previously mentionned ~/.*ware/~ you
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don't want to be involved with.
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Like forces you to pay a lot more, remove features, start to become a
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bloatware, make it harder to interop with other platforms (prefer Azure
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to AWS etc...).
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3. If everything involve machines in the cloud via the browser,
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it makes it harder to play locally with your machine.
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4. Sureveillance on meaningless or wrong metrics about your work.
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Instead of being evaluated on the feature you shipped or on other higher
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level metrics. It will be very tempting for your bosses to find flaws in
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your working habits.
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We are already living in a world were surveillance, metrics and stats
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are too easy to grab about a person. And anyone involved know this is
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all bullshit.
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Human are very good to play those kind of games.
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So people really working hard for the best will certainly perform badly
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compared to other people that simply trick the system.
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So if the endgoal of GitHub™ is really to help open source and single
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developer.
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And more generally provide simply a better working experience by adding a
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new tool without any hidden marketing plan.
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Yes great. But I really doubt a company offer anything without a plan to
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make it worth it.
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Until here I mostly talked about the Github Codespace article and HN thread reaction.
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Where I saw a lot too much enthusiasm about this news for my taste.
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But the other articles and their reaction in HN show that yes, HN might not
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be for me anymore.
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Most of the top level comment in [[https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23092657][Name one idea that changed your life]]
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are about how to not fall for the trap of the [[https://nesslabs.com/confirmation-bias][confirmation bias]].
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That's really great.
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But as a former scientist, this is only the very first step.
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I might be totally wrong.
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But I would have expected that the same question being answered a few years
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back on HN would have also provided those answers but also deeper ones.
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The [[https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23102430][Zoom acquires keybase]] is just again a confirmation that, yes.
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When you chose to adopt a tool.
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You should ask yourself if it is worth to invest your time and energy in it.
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Because most of the time, the tool has a finite and short lifetime.
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Finally, about [[https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23107123][Making Emacs popular again]].
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The first comment was about how VSCode is easy to start with as compared to
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Emacs that need a lot more time to configure correctly for your needs.
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Yes, VSCode certainly just work and is easy to use.
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But Emacs is another beast.
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VSCode can become bad very fast, you don't control how it will evolve.
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Emacs on the other hand is 44 year old and was designed so that it adapts to you.
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You are the one using libs and customizing.
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It's a bit of the same Frameworks vs Libraries argument.
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Framework are easier to start with, but soon you find corner cases were you
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cannot use them correctly and are fighting agains the framework.
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A Library on the other hand, is just a bunch of helpers you can use.
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And if you need another functionality, just make it using the libraries.
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So libraries, programming languages and tools have generally subject to the
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same debate.
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- Easy now, but more difficult later VS harder now but easier in the future.
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So if you are going to need a "solution" for a problem for a very small
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amount of time. The "Framework/3rd party tool/etc..." is certainly the best
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solution to choose.
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If you're going to make a living with it, and pass most of your time with
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this tool. I highly suggest the second option.
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Emacs is like that.
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Hard to start, but with emacs come a huge power that you will probably
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never be able to get with any other IDE/Editor.
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And above this, choosing a Free Software gives you a lot more control about
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its evolution.
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I wouldn't be surprised if in a few years VSCode started to show ads during
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startup ad why not in the middle of your work.
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On the other hand this will never occurs within Emacs unless you are doing
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this to yourself :).
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[fn:1] note I said /free software/ and not /open source/; c.f [[https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/open-source-misses-the-point.en.html][Why Open Source misses the point of Free Software]]
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* Conclusion
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:PROPERTIES:
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:CUSTOM_ID: conclusion
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:END:
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Choosing a tool:
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- will I use it a lot?
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- do I trust that I'll use the same tool in 5 years, 10 years?
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- who is in control?
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- Is it worth to invest my time in it?
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Most of these new tools from startup disapears after about 5 years.
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So if you plan on using a tool for something important for you.
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Take care that it will exists as it is today, or even better in a few years.
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* PLAN :noexport:
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:PROPERTIES:
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:CUSTOM_ID: plan
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:END:
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- common point, modern tools deprecates and disapear.
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- how to chose a good tool
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