d3Xt3r

@d3Xt3r@lemmy.world
8 Post – 140 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

I left Reddit because Spez is an asshole and he killed third-party API access (which, btw, impacted more than just clients - many useful bots/scripts died too as a result of this change).

For many of us, Sync was Reddit, and killing Sync basically killed Reddit for us, but now that Sync is back (for Lemmy), many of us are more than happy to pay a subscription to support the dev, instead of supporting Reddit. ljdawson is an awesome developer who actually listens to his users and updates his apps regularly. If you don't want to support him and/or use a different app, that's your call of course, but for fans of Sync, it's like coming back home after a long time and getting that feeling of "there's no place like home".

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Microsoft are looking at putting datacenters under the ocean

Um, no they're not. That article you linked is from 2018, and the experiment concluded in 2020. They pulled the data center out, and concluded that whilst the experiment was successful, several challenges still remain (such as around repairs and maintenance, physical security and energy supply reliability), so they haven't toyed around with the idea since then.

Basically, Microsoft have no plans at all currently to put data centers under the ocean - unless you've got some insider knowledge.

The thing is, Windows 11 doesn't even need TPM - it's just an arbitrary flag the installer looks for - which can easily be bypassed using a registry key - but MS have conveniently decided not to make a GUI for this, nor publicize that it can be bypassed by the end user.

All of this is just a conspiracy by Microsoft and it's OEM partners (mainly Intel) to generate more sales.

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The Play Store peaked back when it was still called Android Market (which I still reckon is a better name). DAE remember this?

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Because Firefox is like a democracy, they prioritize work based on number of votes on issues/feature requests. The AudioEncoder API has literally just one vote, and the overall WebCodecs API that it's a part of only has five votes. This shows that there's very little demand for it, meaning very few sites actually use this (that or the vast majority of Firefox users don't use/need this feature). Why bother focusing your efforts on implementing something that most users don't care about? The higher priority things that most Firefox users care about is stuff like performance, and Mozilla have been making some good progress too on that front.

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Wow, Cult of the Dead Cow, what a blast from the past. Takes me back to my childhood, playing with Back Orifice and NetBus on our school PCs and trolling my classmates. Good times.

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Hah, same here. Nobara for me and Zorin for mum, works like a charm. If only mainstream OEMs pre-installed Linux and promoted it more... But I guess this is fine too. One day, when I have enough capital, I'll launch my own Linux Desktop company and be the change I want to see.

Have you tried installing MTGO using Lutris? Apparently it works fine, but you'll need some tweaks. The key is to use windowed mode, disable music and card animations:

Runner options: -Use the latest version of lutri-proton if it's not the default. -Use windowed (virtual desktop) mode and the display resolution of whatever device you are playing on. This was the biggest fix of most problems for me with stuff related to proper rendering of windows. -All else is default from Lutris install

System options: -Uncheck restrict number of cores -Disable desktop effects -All else is default from Lutris install

In-game options: -Disable or silence music and Uncheck play client startup music -Disable card animations(summoning sickness and foil treatment)

I've also found that it is always better to close the program using the Stop button on Lutris, there's a bug where sometimes if you close out of the game via the Close button in the window, it will not properly stop the game, and will prevent starting the game back up again. I also tend to start the game in Lutris instead of via a desktop shortcut.

https://old.reddit.com/r/SteamDeck/comments/101262d/psa_mtgo_on_steam_deck/j9bqck9/

Here in Wellington, New Zealand, we have a very successful and bustling cyber café called Respawn, which is one of those rare cyber cafés that actually also offers food - and some pretty decent food at that (they're even on Uber Eats!). In addition to PCs, they have all the major consoles, racing rigs and even VR gear too, so there's plenty of reasons to go there since not everyone has the room (or budget) for a racing rig or VR at home. They also host regular events like mechanical keyboard meetups, eSports tournaments and so on. And although all my friends have a decent PC/console, we're now spread all over the country, so whenever we have a get-together, we meet up at cafés like Respawn and have a LAN party like the good ol' days. My friends and I are grateful cafés like this still exist.

Respawn's success shows us that cyber cafés still have a place and can make it work, they just need to diversify and offer reasons for folks to come back.

Because it's much more fun to come up with passphrases like Correct Battery Horse Staple.

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The advantage is that you get to sell your data to Google instead of Microsoft, yay!

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And even if you have the equipment, whether your ears can discern the difference is debatable. And even if you can discern the difference, whether it's a noticeable improvement is another matter. And even if is a noticeable improvement, that doesn't necessarily mean your enjoyment of the music is any higher - sure, you may be able to make out some additional instruments or some nuances you didn't pick up before, but that doesn't mean the emotional response that's invoked in you is any higher. At least in my case, I found that in the end, it didn't really matter - the enjoyment that I got from listening to lossless audio via audiophile gear wasn't really much different from the enjoyment I got from HQ streaming music via regular gear. At least, the inconvenience wasn't really worth the gains.

IMO, music is about emotions and mood. Some of my fondest memories of music can be traced back to crackly radio on a cheap 2-in-1 set and making mixtapes, or catching the FM waves whilst driving and discovering some legit good tracks, many of which are still part of my regular playlists.

One Must Fall 2097, an awesome robot fighting game for DOS, which is quite different from every other fighting game, because in this one you have to select both pilots and the robots, and each pilot and robot have their own specialities and back stories, so it makes for a lot more interesting gameplay compared to other games in this genre.

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Counter-counterpoint: he could work as a pentester, where his sole purpose is to just break into things.

Leave the policy making and actual hardening to someone else.

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I've never come across a single paywalled news site that was worth subscribing to. Pretty much 100% of the paywalled content I've ever come across were all some random links I found via Google or Reddit (and now Lemmy). It wasn't like I was particularly trying to visit that site and read all of their articles or something. Also, just so we're clear, I'm not saying that I don't to pay/donate/subscribe to stuff - I subscribe to Spotify because I use it daily and it's worth it, I subscribe to Sync because I use it daily and it's worth it etc.

But most of these paywalled news sites (or some random scientific paper published on some random science journal) isn't something that I'm really interested in pursuing a subscription for, just because I stumbled upon some random link out of curiosity - so if they think that I'll subscribe just because of one random article... that's just shitty business.

Ideally, they should just let me view that random article for free and set a cookie (could be server-side) and say "hey, your IP address has viewed three articles on this site already, so we think you like our stuff so, you should really consider subscribing if you want to read more content!". I mean, that makes sense. I'd then go, "yep, this site has quality content and the type of content I'd like to read, so it's worth subscribing to".

But no, instead they're like "heeey random visitor, you just stumbled upon this random link and hey guess what, you need an entire subscription just to read one ducking article! Of course, asking you to pay for a whole month's worth of subscription makes total sense, and isn't going to put you off, right?"

  • Google - Shoots itself in the foot by planning to introduce Web Intregrity to Chrome, because they're now evil.

TL;DW?

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How about Gogs? The whole thing is < 30 MB, and is lightweight enough to run on a Raspberry Pi. You can even get a native binary package if you want to run it without the overhead of Docker.

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From from what I heard, apparently it's a lot slower than Box4Droid, although it's easier to use.

There's also the upcoming Cassia emulator, which looks promising and should be better than either of them.

As for the use case, there are plenty of good PC games without a decent Android port/equivalent. A lot of us spend more time on Android than on PC, so it makes sense that we're starting to see more and more projects like these (besides, most native Android games suck).

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Not OP, but I occasionally come across this issue at work, where some user complains they they are unable to access a file/folder because of the limit. You often find this in medium-large organisations with many regions and divisions and departments etc. Usually they would create a shortcut to their team/project's folder space so they don't have to manually navigate to it each time. The folder structure might be quite nested, but it's organized logically, it makes sense. Better than dumping millions of files into a single folder.

Anyways, this isn't actually an NTFS limit, but a Windows API limit. There's even a registry value[1] you can change to lift the limit, but the problem is that it can crash legacy programs or lead to unexpected behavior, so large organisations (like ours) shy away from the change.

  1. https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/fileio/maximum-file-path-limitation?tabs=registry

In both cases though, there is a legal requirement to prove that you're above legal age to buy/consume alcohol. However, there's is no legal requirement to provide such information to a social media platform.

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This hasn't aged well:

FTFY

Microsoft now has implemented "compare with Microsoft Bing Chat™, an AI search engine powered by OpenAI GPT-4™" button when you visit Alphabet's Google Bard™ in Microsoft Edge™©®

UBI should be a government initiative, and funding for it should be collected in form of tax, irrespective of AI. Because more and more humans are getting replaced with automation and technology in general, and a lot of this being done so gradually that you don't notice it, or think of it as a problem. Every time you saw headlines like "xx corporation has laid off hundreds/thousands of employees" in the past, had very little to do with AI, but could have to do with technology and progress in general, plus a lot of other factors. Every little new development could have a butterfly effect that's hard to calculate.

Neither AI, nor the loss of jobs in general, should be a factor for UBI funding. AI is just another new technological development, maybe even a disruptive one, but it's nothing so new that we need to pick up our pitchforks against.

As for compensating creative owners, that's a bigger discussion on IP protection and ownership in general, and the responsibility falls upon the IP owners (and maybe appropriate laws). For instance, we've seen news sites, science publishers etc paywall their work, and that's because they want to protect their work and get compensation for viewership - and this has nothing to do with AI. If people want compensation for their work, then they should take appropriate measures to protect their work, and/or come up with alternate revenue streams, if it's impossible to paywall their work (for instance, how some youtubers choose to seek sponsorship or patreon donations). If people want to prevent their work from being stolen and redistributed, appropriate action should be taken against the persons/sites stealing their work (eg via DMCA etc). It's not the AI's fault for eating up copyrighted content on public sites like pastebin.com or Scribd, it's the fault of the people uploading it.

Yep. You need to convert the disk into a "dynamic disk" (no data loss btw) and then you can create a "spanned volume" across the disks. You can also create a striped volume for performance, which is basically RAID 0.

But apparently dynamic disks are now deprecated and Microsoft wants you to use "storage spaces" instead, which is basically RAID and not just simple spanned volumes. The problem with this, IIRC, is that you'll need at least two extra drives (in addition to the drive where Windows is installed).

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There's an official Wolfram plugin for ChatGPT now, so all math can be handed over to it for solving.

You can still try the earlier Diablo games. Diablo 1 with Belzebub mod is pretty fun (or get DevilutionX if you want a more authentic experience but with some modern QoL stuff), Diablo 2 with Project Diablo 2 mod is even more fun (probably the best Diablo variant IMO), and there's also Blizzard's official Diablo 2 Resurrected, if you can't tolerate old school graphics.

Yep, just use the rectangular selection from the edge panel and you can save it as a screenshot or extract the text.

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I asked ChatGPT to write a movie summary based on this:

Indiana Jones and the Rush to Renewables

In the film "Indiana Jones and the Rush to Renewables," famed archaeologist and adventurer Indiana Jones is called upon for a mission unlike any he has undertaken before. The Indian government, which has recently initiated a massive renewable energy project, is on the verge of a crisis. Newly installed solar panels in rural areas across India, the linchpin of this green revolution, are failing mysteriously and rapidly, jeopardizing the country's sustainable future and the livelihood of millions.

The government, suspecting foul play, invites Jones, renowned for his problem-solving abilities and knack for adventure. He embarks on a journey through the colorful landscapes of rural India, exploring age-old temples, bustling markets, and breathtaking mountain terrains, all the while attempting to solve the riddle of the failing solar panels.

Along the way, Jones uncovers a nefarious plot by an unscrupulous corporation intending to sabotage India's renewable energy efforts to maintain their monopoly over the energy sector. With the help of a brilliant young Indian scientist, an energy activist, and a troupe of loyal friends, Jones must outsmart the corporation, decode a series of cryptic clues rooted in Indian history, and unravel the technical mystery behind the solar panel failures.

In a thrilling climax, Jones and his team confront the corporate villains, exposing their plot and finding the solution to restore the solar panels, ensuring a brighter and greener future for India. "Indiana Jones and the Rush to Renewables" weaves together the charm of classic Indiana Jones adventure with modern environmental issues, reminding us that sometimes, the greatest treasure is a sustainable future for all.

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  • Firefox
  • KeePassDX (IMO, better than Bitwarden)
  • Droidify (F-Droid client)
  • mpv (Media player)
  • NewPipe (YouTube client)
  • Shelter (isolate/clone apps, create separate work profile)
  • WiFiAnalyzer

Okay, but does Matrix allow you to /slap people?

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Yep. The number of times I've gone to the Play Store to discover new apps, in the past few years is exactly zero. Most of the new apps I've come across is via some news article or recommendations on Reddit (now Lemmy).

The enshittification actually began several years ago, back when FB bought WhatsApp. That was the moment you gave up on privacy, the moment that was a clear sign that it was all going to go downhill from there. If y'all didn't quit WhatsApp at that time, then you bought it upon yourselves. The truth is, you've been using a shitty service for a long time and whoring your data to Meta and making Zuckerberg richer, so this latest feature bloat or w/e isn't the least bit interesting.

#Roombas, roll out!

Looks nice! How did you get/make the top panel, and what are you using for the dock?

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IT guy here, the NFC thing isn't really a concern (NFC doesn't work that way) or for that matter, any other wireless technology, as it'll need to authenticate with your phone somehow. If you can somehow simply scan data from a phone without any form of authentication, that would be a massive security hole - something that would be patched by the vendors real quick. Also, if something like that were possible then the TSA/FBI wouldn't have any issues pulling data from locked phones. Think of all the times you've had to put your phone thru the xray machines at the airports. Also see the case of FBI vs Apple for instance.

The other issues you've mentioned are valid though. Heck my Galaxy Fold won't even fit in that slot.

Discord hardly works

Wut? I use Discord in Linux (Nobara) and it works just fine, including activity detection and screen sharing. Sure, Discord on Linux had some limitations in the past, but that's no longer an issue, assuming you're using a decent gaming-optimised distro like Nobara.

Linux would've already passed 5%

Highly unlikely. The low market share is mainly because a) Linux does not come pre-installed on most computers - the vast majority of users just buy prebuilt computers and use whatever OS it came with and don't tinker with their systems and b) most people like to use whatever system they're familiar with and will not change unless they have a very very compelling reason for switching.

In fact the only reason why the marketshare jumped recently is thanks to Steam Deck. If we want Linux numbers to go up, we need more systems like the Steam Deck, and more companies like Valve to work with upstream kernel and other projects to implement much needed features and accelerate development efforts.

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https://www.talos.dev/

It runs entirely in RAM, administration is super simple, no ssh, easy to update/and upgrade, immutable, minimal distro designed specifically for secure container usage.

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As someone who has both a regular full-size electric oven and an air fryer, I use my air fryer a lot more and would 100% recommend it.

  • It's not just quicker, it's a lot quicker, considering you don't need to do a 15 minute preheat like regular ovens. On the other hand, my air fryer only needs 2 minutes.
  • Saves a lot of energy - I mean, who doesn't like to save energy? Especially when I want to reheat stuff, I'm done with the air fryer - even cleaning it - all in the duration a conventional oven would take just to finish heating up.
  • In my experience of cleaning both ovens and air fryers, I'd say an air fryer is easier to clean, simply because the surface area is a lot smaller. Sure, you can put an oven tray in the dishwasher, but don't you clean the rest of the oven? As for an air fryer, you may be able to put the tray/basket in the dishwasher, depending on the model, but even otherwise, a couple of quick swipes with a paper towel does the trick.

In saying that, newer tabletop electric ovens also double up as air fryers, such as the one by Breville - so if you have the space and don't have an existing oven, get one of of these I'd reckon as they would be more versatile.

If the corporate policy doesn't explicitly require you to wear pants (or prohibit shorts), then just go ahead and wear em I reckon, they can't fire you for wearing shorts.