Calling the migration from Python2 -> Python3 "Python3 Support" is disingenuous at best.
You don't have a choice. There's no going back. You shouldn't BE supporting Python2. If it breaks in Python2, then that's fine, because no one should be using it anymore.
Any project that hasn't switched (motioneye, calibre, etc) has had years to work on it. Frankly, it's embarrassing.
Why the FUCK is this so different from Fedora, isn't it just supposed to be RHEL??
Isn't RHEL just Fedora Enterprise???
Why aren't some python2 packages unavailable
Why is pip3 installing to /usr/local/lib64
AAAAAAAAAAAAAA
Liked: 水樹奈々「Justice to Believe」(NANA MIZUKI LIVE MUSEUM 2007) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysbppgHKGAY
Liked: A man who can't cook plays Cooking Mama Cookstar https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E0P53-iWTnY
Keybase, the company that asks you to upload your private keys to their servers, has just been acquired by Zoom, an essentially Chinese company notorious for having terrible concepts on how encryption should be implemented.
Even if you gave Keybase the benefit of the doubt beforehand, this is corporate suicide at it's most graphic. Delete your Keybase keys. Close your account. Rotate everything that Keybase touched, be that password or cryptomaterial.
Zoom acquired Keybase today.
Keybase helped me to identify a trend in the software industry: using a pretty UI to cover up the disruption of an open ecosystem with a closed, centralized replacement. Keybase seemed cool on the face of it - making encryption easier is a laudible goal, and PGP certainly could use the improvement. But, thanks to Keybase, now I ask different questions upfront.
Beware the Keybase formula:
1. Integrates with an existing, open ecosystem
2. May have open-source clients, but server is closed source and does not federate
3. Pretty UI and good marketing
4. VC funded
Hana is swearing a lot
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mk5HX1BL4do
It's great
20歳 | 公共図書館員 | *nix enthusiast | comp. sci. ⏩ elmhurst | discord: thebitstick#0821 | MakotoP