![](https://lemmy.sdf.org/pictrs/image/732e0cbc-5bce-49dd-8dc3-5c6972518e48.png)
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Most of my code and some non-code is under ~/src
, but I have repos scattered all around for other things.
Instructor, author, developer. Creator of Beej’s Guides.
openpgp4fpr:CD99029AAD50ED6AD2023932A165F24CF846C3C8
Most of my code and some non-code is under ~/src
, but I have repos scattered all around for other things.
People 100% aren’t going to pay to access every random website they want to visit. So what you’d end up with in a world without ads is only the big corporations being able to run a website.
I’m not so convinced. I run a website with zero ads or tracking and I’m not a big corporation.
I’ve been sticking with FF proper since it has the sync stuff that’s easily used. But it sounds like it’s about time to set up a sync server and run a FF fork.
My parents are in their 80s and this crap will push them to Linux.
I’m the same generation. My flowchart is: known contact, answer. Unknown contact, voicemail. Automatic VM transcriptions are great.
I don’t know the details behind it, but it sure takes its sweet time figuring it out. I’ve let it sit 20 minutes before giving up.
Yeah. Under a second to the launcher, and (just timed it) 6 seconds to load and run my existing world.
I haven’t measured it, but I can tell I’m noticably slower on standard editors than Vim.
When I had to match against misspells I found Levenshtein distance to be most useful.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levenshtein_distance?wprov=sfla1
Really? Mine launches in a few seconds. Maybe I haven’t explored enough. 😁
I started using one of the userspace oom killers a while ago and have been much happier. Instead of the system becoming unresponsive, suddenly Slack just dies. It’s great.
I played quite a bit of solo mineclone2/voxelibre. Really good stuff with a surprisingly short wishlist on my part.
It’s silly, but one of my favorite things is that it fires up the launcher in under a second. Reminds me of when software wasn’t bloated halfway to hell. 😁
Was that sadometer correctly calibrated to NIST specifications?
On the last system I put together I used xfs because I was thinking ext4 development was waning. TBH I can’t really tell the difference in my regular usage.
Word on the street is that xfs sometimes corrupts files, but I’m not sure if that’s true anymore.
Maybe on the next system I’ll be back to ext4.
I copied all my stuff out of drive several months ago and canceled my plan. But I only actually deleted the files a couple months ago, and they actually only got deleted about a month ago. And who knows if actually deleting files on Google does anything. I got to assume it’s all part of the data set at this point.
Edit: my chief regret at this point is that I didn’t write mountains of Star Trek porn fanfiction for their AI to consume.
“Every dependency is an asset. Every dependency is a liability.”
I’m a teacher at university and I run Arch, BTW. 😁
IA is definitely on shaky legal ground here. But as far as I’m concerned, they’re in the right.
I definitely use them a lot, but I think “very” is too strong a word. It’s pretty easy to get confident, contradictory information from them. They’re a good place to start and brainstorm, but all the information has to be verified either by running and testing the code, or by finding a human source.
https://archive.ph/19Hz4