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Mais où est donc passé *LE* contre pouvoir

 Je suis un enfant post 68ar. J'ai grandi dans un âge d'or - moins doré que les trente glorieuses, mais doré quand même. Quand j'étais petit le seul souci était le chômage. Pas de : classes surchargées déserts médicaux  déserts postaux moins de problèmes dans les hôpitaux des transports en communs utilisables pas de différences de salaire aussi énorme entre patrons et employés   Bref, pas tant de problème dans nos sociétés.  Je pense et je n'en ai pas la preuve que nos sociétés ont grandement changée post 1989 avec la perte du contre-pouvoir soviétique. Les patrons qui payaient plus que ce soit en impôts ou en salaire par peur d'une prise de pouvoir à la russe. Depuis plus de contre pouvoir, plus de peur et tout qui part en couille.

Fosdem 2026 recap

  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SPARCstation_5#SPARCstation_4 This year I was lucky again and was able to attend FOSDEM. This turned out to be more of a social conference than a technical one for me this year. I mean:  I had a bunch of really great conversations, with peers and users of Firefox. I was there to man the Mozilla booth . The idea was to engage people and have them fill up a bingo, in exchange they might go back home with a T-shirt a baseball cap or a pair of socks. Most people that I saw on Saturday afternoon and Sunday morning. Some people complained about AI, but not as many as I was expecting. Explaining why and that https://techcrunch.com/2026/02/02/firefox-will-soon-let-you-block-all-of-its-generative-ai-features/ would soon be available made them all understand and think that they could keep Firefox as their main browser. Our sticker stock melts like snow under the sun. The people from mozilla.ai had some pretty interesting discussions with some users that ...

Are mozilla's fork any good?

To answer that question, we first need to understand how complex, writing or maintaining a web browser is.  A "modern" web browser is : a network stack, and html+[1] parser,  and image+[2] decoder, a javascript[3] interpreter compiler, a User's interface, integration with the underlying OS[4], And all the other things I'm currently forgetting.   Of course, all the above point are interacting with one another in different ways. In order for "the web" to work, standards are developed and then implemented in the different browsers, rendering engines. In order to "make" the browser, you need engineers to write and maintain the code, which is probably around 30 Million lines of code[5] for Firefox. Once the code is written, it needs to be compiled [6] and tested [6]. This requires machines that run the operating system the browser ships to (As of this day, mozilla officially ships on Linux, Microslop Windows and MacOS X - community builds for *BSD do ex...