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 <provider_name>Rainbow Dash Network</provider_name>
 <provider_url>http://rainbowdash.net/</provider_url>
 <title>Omni (omni)'s status on Wednesday, 28-Nov-12 19:10:45 UTC</title>
 <author_name>Omni (omni)</author_name>
 <author_url>http://rainbowdash.net/omni</author_url>
 <url>http://rainbowdash.net/notice/2132607</url>
 <html>@&lt;span class=&quot;vcard&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://rainbowdash.net/user/2959&quot; class=&quot;url&quot; title=&quot;Kaiba (formerly Ponydude)&quot;&gt;&lt;span class=&quot;fn nickname&quot;&gt;widget&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt; For me, personally, it's the random glitches. I can't trust systemd to shut down my system correctly, because in at least 1 out of 10 cases it will completely freeze during the shutdown procedure. Ignoring that, and after getting through the initial shock of it, it's actually a pretty nice tool with a lot of power, and .service files are easy to write. You can't start or stop something with an argument, though (&amp;quot;systemctl start mpd panic&amp;quot; won't actually pass &amp;quot;panic&amp;quot; along to mpd (not that MPD has such a feature, but it's an example)), so you need multiple service files for every option you want. Besides that, I do somewhat like it. It's the little issues every now and then, of which I wished they wouldn't exist after 2 years of development, but it surely has some nice points and if it works as it should, it's pretty fast.</html>
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