49
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
this post was submitted on 14 Aug 2025
49 points (96.2% liked)
Python
7383 readers
17 users here now
Welcome to the Python community on the programming.dev Lemmy instance!
📅 Events
Past
November 2023
- PyCon Ireland 2023, 11-12th
- PyData Tel Aviv 2023 14th
October 2023
- PyConES Canarias 2023, 6-8th
- DjangoCon US 2023, 16-20th (!django 💬)
July 2023
- PyDelhi Meetup, 2nd
- PyCon Israel, 4-5th
- DFW Pythoneers, 6th
- Django Girls Abraka, 6-7th
- SciPy 2023 10-16th, Austin
- IndyPy, 11th
- Leipzig Python User Group, 11th
- Austin Python, 12th
- EuroPython 2023, 17-23rd
- Austin Python: Evening of Coding, 18th
- PyHEP.dev 2023 - "Python in HEP" Developer's Workshop, 25th
August 2023
- PyLadies Dublin, 15th
- EuroSciPy 2023, 14-18th
September 2023
- PyData Amsterdam, 14-16th
- PyCon UK, 22nd - 25th
🐍 Python project:
- Python
- Documentation
- News & Blog
- Python Planet blog aggregator
💓 Python Community:
- #python IRC for general questions
- #python-dev IRC for CPython developers
- PySlackers Slack channel
- Python Discord server
- Python Weekly newsletters
- Mailing lists
- Forum
✨ Python Ecosystem:
🌌 Fediverse
Communities
- #python on Mastodon
- c/django on programming.dev
- c/pythorhead on lemmy.dbzer0.com
Projects
- Pythörhead: a Python library for interacting with Lemmy
- Plemmy: a Python package for accessing the Lemmy API
- pylemmy pylemmy enables simple access to Lemmy's API with Python
- mastodon.py, a Python wrapper for the Mastodon API
Feeds
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
I'm not talking specifically Python. Just macOS and docker. That combination has proven time and time again to be a massive timesink in every place I've seen it used. Devs can spend days (not joking, I've seen this happen multiple times) getting it setup for whichever purpose.
It went from all kinds of fancy wrappers around QEMU to claims that Rosetta and Intel docker would work, to Apple's VMs, docker's proprietary VM (after they dropped qemu), Ubuntu's Multi-pass, and that's where I stopped following the news. Every single one of these solutions claimed to be the best and they all ran into such massive problems that they needed hacks and workarounds and "novel" solutions.
And these weren't even for niche or hardware related stuff. Simply mounting the repository's folder or mounting a node_module folder absolutely killed performance on Macs because it wasn't direct hardware access or filesystem access but everything had to go through a socket or some sort from the VM to Mac. Anything with many files or file access completely tanked: java, Kotlin, C/C++, Rust, anything compilation, JavaScript and it's modules, Perl too.
One would expect the logical conclusion to be "Mac isn't the best development platform for Linux deployables" but instead a few glossy, rounded corners later and people cling on to it and then blame the tools for not adapting to Mac hacks.
Anti Commercial-AI license
Well, that's fair; first-class support for running an actual Linux kernel, with the containerization support that implies, is one of the reasons I prefer Windows with WSL as a dev environment when using Docker (at least, in companies where the IT team won't just let you run native Linux).