It’s open source. If 32 bit support is important enough, people can fork and maintain it.
SavvyWolf
Hello there!
I’m also @savvywolf@furry.engineer , and I have a website at https://www.savagewolf.org/ .
He/They
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SavvyWolf@pawb.socialto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•This just happened to me, and I did waste 1-2h because of itEnglish
4·23 days agoThis is why you use Arch/Nix because the package is likely in their repos.
The software probably still won’t work, but you can waste more time on it.
SavvyWolf@pawb.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Why doesn't Ghost v6 include Fediverse commenting ?English
1·2 months agoSo, to address the elephant in the room… Why does commenting on a blog post need any kind of account? Why not have fields for “name” and “comment body” and use capcha and/or manual approval to guard against spam?
Like, why does everything need to be tied to an account nowadays?
There’s not much here beyond what you want to accomplish. Writing what you want is the easy process, actually writing it is where motivation goes to die. :P
In terms of the content itself, where are you going to source information from? How are you going to ensure the information is accurate and usefull? How are you going to cover the idea that no two neurodivergent people are alike? Who are you going to talk to?
One thing that did jump out at me though is the following:
Terms like “neurodivergent” are intentionally avoided unless selected by the user.
I’d be interested to hear your reasoning behind this. Claiming “neurodivergent” is pathologising language is a common dogwhistle used by those who don’t value our right to self identify or organise.


It’s easy to get fame as a programmer: Just make a popular open source project and you’ll be surrounded by people angry at you for not doing enough upaid work on it.