Just did that a month ago. My office is already filling up with strange equipment which I'm not 100% sure where I got it from. I feel enticed to plug it into something...
(/srs happy to answer Linux/Jellyfin questions btw)
I wish 'em well, but I have spent too many hours relearning keybindings and am firmly in the grasp of the sunk-cost fallacy.
Also Neovim's LSP support genuinely seems to be pioneering a sustainable way to get multi-language code completion/code actions outside of a clunky corporate IDE. So I guess I'll check that out.
I have been informed by another commenter, that I am engaging in "knee-jerk reactionism at its finest". I shall reflect deeply on this, once I stop giggling.
I was low-key hoping for a technical philosophical article, which argues that to find any of this shit useful you need a distinctly american understanding of reality.
Kind of wild that the guy who popularized "enshittification" as a term will die on the hill that the technology which drives the industrial enshittification of all human media is fine actually, because some people find the plugins useful.
Eh, straight pip with venv and pip-tools for support worked fine anyway. wrong uv!
As for systemd... time to look at the BSDs? Was Debian among the anti-slop projects? Would be nice if they took an interest in preventing the slopification of one of their core system.
I hadn't heard of square either. Are they the guys doing squarespace? No idea.
EDIT: Okay, I did hear of CashApp, and it goes without saying that you need an entire lock-in ecosystem and a crypto-gimmick around a fintech product these days.
My experience is that it will sort of work with whatever you dump in there, might just not be organized perfectly neatly.
If it bothers you, you can dig into strict filenames and metadata annotations and such.