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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)SC
Posts
10
Comments
1,584
Joined
9 mo. ago

  • Even following ‘beginner’ tutorials is hit or miss

    It's gotten worse than it even used to be, because more than half the "tutorials" I've run across are clearly AI written and basically flat out wrong.

    Of course, they're ALSO the "answers" that get pushed by Bing/Google so even if you run into someone who is willing to follow documentation, they're going to get served worthless slop.

    One thing I will give arch is that if there's a wiki entry for something, it's at least written by a human and is actually accurate which is more than I've found ANYWHERE else.

  • There's no such thing as too much seeding.

    Well, maybe the 85tb of Ubuntu 24.04 I've done is too much, but I mean, whatever.

    (I've got basically everything I've downloaded in the last 7 years seeding, some 6000 torrents. qBittorrent isn't the most happy with this, but it's still working, if using a shit-ton of RAM at this point.)

  • And more fun, lots of laptops have really goofy routing. I've got one where the DP alt mode on the USB-C ports are on the dGPU, but the HDMI ports are on the iGPU. And the internal panel is on the iGPU unless you switch it to be on the dGPU because yay mux.

    Why? I don't know. Too much meth while laying the board out or something I guess.

  • 10940X

    "They say", but they're right. Ryzen chips do have worse idle power usage, but you're talking about 10w or so, at most.

    And uh, if you were looking at an X-series CPU, I can't see how that 10w is a dealbreaker, because you were already looking at a shockingly inefficient chip.

  • Everything is temporary, except for that 25 year old system that's keeping everything running and can't be replaced because nobody knows how or why it works just that if you touch it everything falls over.

  • I don't recall exactly, but it's more like days rather than hours. At some point the instances will mark you as down, and then stop trying to federate with you, so there's a hard limit but it's fairly generous and not especially aggressive.

    I found the PR for the queue, and it mentions retries but doesn't seem to mention exact timing, at least to my quick read. ( https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/pull/3605 )

  • I mean, eBay exists. You can get a Commodore 64, a Mac II-era mac, or a 486 for not that much money.

    I have a giant pile of retro stuff including those, and an absurdly expensive Pentium 1ghz box with a proper Vortex 2 and 3dfx voodoo 5 card, sitting around for retro gaming.

    Which uh, mostly is all I do anymore. There's also a TON of modern improvements to emulate floppy drives, replace hard drives with SD cards, and even new video and sound cards that are waaaaay better than what you had to deal with when the hardware was new.

    It's not as cheap as it was 5 years ago, but it's still reasonable if you have an era you're after and kinda stay focused on one or two retro computers and don't, say, decide you want to own one of every G3 and G4 tower that was made or anything insane like that.

    ....stop looking at me like that.

    There's also a ton of Youtubers that are touching all sorts of rare and expensive hardware that's a good watch, too. (8 Bit Guy, LGR, Adrian's Digital Basement, Necroware)

  • I'm not quite THAT old, but I certainly remember the early 90s.

    Tech was all new and cool, and I remember very much reading computer shopper or going to various computer stores looking at all the new cool shit I desperately wanted but could in no way afford.

    And, of course, the BBS lists that were in the back of computer shopper and various other things like that: I spent uh, more time than I should admit arguing about stupid shit online via local BBSes and Fidonet and a couple of other networks. But, even then, you're right: the absolute hostility was very high, but it was about who had the "right" computer, or my dumb 13 year old opinion of which games were fun, and the level of absolute grumpiness was way lower.

    (As an aside, those FTN-style networks do still exist, and still have people having conversations on them, and it's still pretty great.)

    Now even the hardware is boring: oh gee, the new CPUs are 5% faster for $600! Oh yay! New video cards which are 10% faster for $1800! Like who gives a shit anymore. The days of there being generational or even every-other-generational improvements sufficient to justify prices of buying it are quite dead, and I don't know if that's just physics being a pain or if it's straight up engineering design choices. Both, probably.

    Anyway I'll stop internet Boomering and go take my metamucil and watch the wheel.

  • They were NiCad batteries, which would leak, and then completely eat and destroy the charging/temperature board.

    Source: I have one and uh, they did and it's completely useless because it won't power on without the batteries attached, and I'm at a total loss as to how to or where even I could get/fix that charging board.

    Shame since you're right, it's super cool, but must-have-a-battery was a horrible design choice that's made repairing it seem like it's probably not possible - I'd have to buy another one to get a working charger board at which point, well, I have a 2nd one so why fix the first?

  • Debian stable is great: it's, well, stable. It's well supported, has an extremely long support window, and the distro has a pretty stellar track record of not doing anything stupid.

    It's very much in the install-once-and-forget-it category, just gotta do updates.

    I run everything in containers for management (but I'm also running something like 90 containers, so a little more complex than your setup) and am firmly of the opinion that, unless you have a compelling reason to NOT run something in a container, just use the containerized version.

  • I really, really wanted one as a kid, but they were quite expensive. Like, actual-real-computer expensive, if I recall correctly.

    The good news is the tech pretty much ended up in the S60 Nokia phones, of which I had uh, a lot. And some of them even had normal keypads, and not one from whatever meth-induced fever dream some guy in Finland had.

  • fax the FBI their plans

    Opsec is not the fediverse's strenth, no. Anything you post here is going right to the FBI, courtesy of Palantir and Peter Thiel.

    Anything you post online ANYWHERE is likely to end up there: if it's not e2e encrypted, then you just told the FBI, and even if it is, you probably shouldn't trust that it's actually secure unless there's public audits showing that it is, and you're using a reproducible build from verified source.

    ...also, unrelated rant: stop taking pictures of people at protests and posting it online. Why is everyone doing state security's job for them?

  • Look, if you can post your way out of this, then we should have been able to post our way into not having to.

    But, judging from the outcomes of all THAT posting, I strongly doubt there's a single thing anyone can post anywhere that'll suddenly make people decide to wake up one day and go 'Oh my! What a mess, I should throw away my entire world view and do ________!' because that's very much not how people actually work.

    Best case, there's enough pain and blood to nudge the lazy fucks into doing something in 2 years, but really, that doesn't do anyone any good for the next 2 years and also very much isn't assured: at least some of the lazies are actually in favor of this and the facists have a pretty good grip on the media and social network effects, so you can't make a toot and expect it'll do shit.

    We're past the polite letters to the editor stage, and in the misery and violence phase, even if it's still being mostly coated in decorum.

  • I still have one!

    It's broken because it was designed by crazy people.

    (The battery is required, the battery failed in such a way that it leaked and ate everything on the battery charger/temperature board, so uh, I have to find a replacement controller board and then put a new battery on it and I have to admit I just haven't been motivated enough to try to find a non-destroyed board from a tiny production run that's like 30 years old now.)

  • I don't think you'd need to use an A-series SOC, considering the power usage of even a M4 is basically a rounding error - and they've already got M-series stuff running passively jammed into a tiny case anyways.

    I'd be on something like that immediately, but I somehow doubt Apple will ever make a 12" Macbook ever again, given that the majority of people seem to like the 13" airs just fine.

    Love to be wrong, though.