nicoweio

@nicoweio@lemmy.world
0 Post – 40 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

I'm actually surprised how low the server costs are. Granted, the userbase is not that large, but it makes me optimistic that Lemmy.world survives long-time.

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Maybe it's about Cloudflare becoming a single point of failure for large parts of the internet?

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I'm not sure if we manage to do the same for video though; hosting these costs a lot more.

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Was this after PH removed all content from non-verified accounts? If so, one might wonder how much it actually helped.

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All CPUs are Electron-based, if you think about it.

Oh my god

Germans on English kezboards know the struggle

From the image, I don't see how this was spamming, though.

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The ratio of helpful/shit behavior is not great, but we do have both.

Easy. Every year is the Year of the Linux Desktop™.

It's not like you can't use Linux on a laptop with Nvidia GPU. It's just that AMD works better (and isn't as much of a PITA in how they treat regular Linux customers).

But… that didn't and doesn't apply to YouTube Music, only to YouTube, right?

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Star Trek also has this.

Though nothing can replace a proper backup

Hrm, but shouldn't Linux Mint, being based on Ubuntu, have basically the same drivers?

And war crimes justify war crimes?

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To be fair, Mint does a good job of fixing the annoyances that Ubuntu introduces. It comes with Snap disabled by default, for example.

You just need to read physical media like stored somewhere you have physical control over, without DRM, and there hardly remains any disagreement.

With NixOS on the rise, I'm not sure how much longer this remains the case. Haven't tried it yet, though.

There's research ongoing on having LLMs search for vulnerabilities. So who knows, LLMs hacking LLMs (in the wild) might be just around the corner.

* needn't

I'm not saying any Gates conspiracies are true, but they sure try to make them appealing.

I feel like this is a good time to point out that Linux is but the kernel. There are server-focused distros, there are consumer-focused distros. Linux supports them all; it isn't really industrial in itself.

According to your quote, it's children plus children lite.

Bubatz 👍🏻

I've never seen this separated into multiple actual pages. As long the “multiple pages” are done in JavaScript, they don't add much complexity.

Speaking of Circles, remember Google+ Circles?

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After some major fuckups by Manjaro, consider EndeavourOS over Manjaro. They are pretty similar otherwise.

Arch is alright if you aren't new to Linux.

Assuming the prerequisite of joining Lemmy doesn't skew this, people who post would be a small minitority. Might be similar for the other features you mentioned.

Is there any precedent to ads in Apple products (apart from their store)? Although they'll surely find other ways to annoy non-Apple users, I don't think ads are "in style" for them.

root folders as in /bin /etc.?

The future as in this will dominate some day or as in this will be the best some day? Cause only one seems reasonable to me.

I've been roaming Linux (meme) communities for years, but never heard of this, even though it originates from the Bell Labs. Thanks for providing me with a new rabbit hole!

This exists. For example, for general decentralized storage, there's storj.io, and there's PeerTube. But I guess there's a reason it's not more widespread. I'd happily be proven wrong, though.

Agreed, though I wondered if bad actors actually bothered, given the less restrictive competition. Probably because PH is so large?

You might be able to grab them from takeout.google.com

What OP said. But here's a more detailed answer courtesy of GPT-4:

Adding cat /dev/random > /dev/pty23 to your .profile would result in an interesting situation whenever you start a login shell.

  1. Behavior of the Command: The command cat /dev/random continuously reads random data from the /dev/random device file, which generates an endless stream of random bytes. Redirecting this to /dev/pty23 means it attempts to write this data to the pseudo-terminal device /dev/pty23.

  2. Impact on Shell Startup: When you add this to your .profile, every time you start a login shell (like when you open a new terminal session), it will execute this command. Since /dev/random produces an endless stream of data, the cat command will not terminate on its own. This means your shell will be stuck executing this command, and you won't get a prompt to enter new commands.

  3. Interactive Shell Issue: The shell remains technically interactive, but because the cat command doesn't complete, you won't get a chance to interact with it. The shell is effectively blocked by the cat command continuously running.

  4. Potential Problems: There's a possibility that /dev/pty23 might not exist on your system, or you might not have the permission to write to it. In such cases, the command would fail, but it would still block the shell if it doesn't exit properly.

  5. Fixing the Issue: To regain control of your shell, you might need to edit your .profile from a different context where it doesn't get executed, like using a non-login shell or booting into a recovery mode.

In summary, it's a kind of a "prank" command that can render your login shell unusable until you remove it from your .profile. It's an example of how powerful shell startup scripts can be, and also a reminder to be cautious about what gets added to them!