@planetpostgresql There was a post put out on the 11th (https://www.postgresql.org/about/news/update-on-continued-trademark-actions-against-the-postgresql-community-2673/) regarding this that explains their issue. If somebody can read this, ignore the points made and still pretend that they are being victimised, then it's no wonder further actions are being taken.
It's just a shame narcissistic persons choose to publish things like this - everybody loses, all for the sake of some attention.
I'm really excited that we have a UK PostgreSQL Conference coming up on 12th September. Grab your tickets before they run out and help make it a great event.
I'm also super proud that we are sponsoring the event.
I mean, LLMs would make perfect CEOs
- Confident
- Persuasive
- Well read
- Never admits a mistake, and will degrade you if you point one out to it
- Can make up reasonable sounding bullshit on the spot to explain their every action
- Relies on exploiting the unpaid labor of thousands of people
- Lives in a reality they invent for themselves
- Fundamentally uncreative
The Call for Papers for PGDay UK ends tomorrow! You did submit, right? If not, last chance to do so!
#PostgreSQL #Conference #PGDay #PGDayUK #CfP #CallForPapers #London
https://2023.pgday.uk/
Call for papers for PGDAY UK closes tomorrow, get your ideas in.
@codepope
The expression "open source" is a well understood term of art regardless of who you think does or doesn't hold authority. To describe something containing commercial restrictions as "open source" conflicts with that understanding for most people and is probably false advertising.
Also, the green keyhole mark is a registered trademark of OSI as is the associated wordmark.
Beyond that, "it's complicated", but @arstechnica simply parroting Meta is unwelcome.
Some news from #Meta releasing LLaMA2 with a license that allows *some* commercial use.
Keyword is **some.**
Don't confuse a limited concession to enter a garden by a gatekeeper with a true common. Open Source has a precise meaning that includes **all** commercial use, don't let that meaning be diluted.
#Postgres Full Text Search is better than... In which I show how #ElasticSearch, #Solr or another search specific database is probably unnecessary for a lot of #PostgreSQL users
https://admcpr.com/postgres-full-text-search-is-better-than-part1/
Working from home is an act of reclamation. I shed not one single tear for the end of the abuse that going to an office enables (paying for each day's travel, constant interruptions, terrible work environments designed by executives who don't feel the pain of these environments, etc.)
Rezone that office space as residential and do something about housing affordability.
https://fosstodon.org/@djlink@mastodon.gamedev.place/110712456514615065
@krysztophe We have a winner here :). Congrats. The user was a bit surprised.... And will read the documentation better next time.
@gruber GDPR does:
• Require active consent before tracking
GDPR does not:
• require interstitials or popups before viewing a web page
DMA does:
• limit the ability for companies that have a monopoly (or near monopoly) in one market from using that position to unfairly advantage them in another
DMA does not:
• “effectively ban” a social media app
Bad implementations by people who don’t care about users ≠ bad legislation
Remember: CfP deadline for #PGDayUK 2023 is July 21st!
Don't you want to visit London in September?
#PostgreSQL #Conference #CallForPapers #CfP #London @postgresuk
"Do not be daunted by the enormity of the world's grief. Do justly, now. Love mercy, now. Walk humbly, now. You are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it."
@intrbiz ditto on remembering "same as cp", I avoid calling them src and dest, because that's how my confusion creeps in.
PostgreSQL, Linux, Java, and more. Lover of computers, electronics and Open Source. European. Lib Dem. Lead Technical Strategist nexteam.co.uk