As if the original comic wasn't reductive and unnecessarily dismissive enough, you've somehow made it worse. Let people make things if they think they have a shot at it, please.
UnityDevice
Gnome 3 implemented 4 as a core feature and got so much flack from users for it. So they made it trigger less and less until they effectively removed it. I still see it happen, but very rarely.
Don't forget GenX, they cut their teeth on DOS and other such horrors.
They're going after the anger dollar, that's a good dollar. We've done research.
fzf
makes ctrl-r really nice so you use it more often, especially if you use tmux as well.
I've been car A and still had car D behind me beep at me. We hate car D.
Oh, that's nice, TIL. But still, there are other projects that do just directly download from GitHub when building, buildroot for example.
Compiling any larger go application would hit this limit almost immediately. For example, podman is written in go and has around 70 dependencies, or about 200 when including transitive dependencies. Not all the depends are hosted on GitHub, but the vast majority are. That means that with a limit of 60 request per hour it would take you 3 hours to build podman on a new machine.
Not to mention, if you have the model you can print it even long after the product support has ended. No company will support a product they stopped making half a decade ago, but you'll still be able to print parts the same way.
"Mad as a bicycle!"