freely 2 years ago • 88%
I've had people surprised when I told them all plants have at least some protein. They really thought the only source is meat 🤷♂️
freely 2 years ago • 100%
I got one instead of an EV, although I did want an electric motorcycle but it's 2x for a subpar product.
Even my new mid/low end adventure bike is only $6200. You can find used street bikes sub-$2000. The cheaper, lower-powered ones usually have better mileage too. Mine has 68mpg running 91 octane (US).
If there's snow on the street (enough to matter) I'm using my ancient car, but otherwise the proper gear and prep can handle my state weather fine (avg 30-85°F depending on time of year).
freely 2 years ago • 100%
Only thing is studded tires and being extra cautious if you're really plowing through snow. But where I am snow gets plowed quickly, except for some back roads.
The real threat is black ice since you're probably fucked if you hit it. The salt usually prevents it though.
freely 2 years ago • 100%
I used it for a while (a few years) before getting a VPN. I couldn't stand the horrible download speeds mostly, but there were always bugs. Not to mention the Arch support randomly breaking for months(?).
Sometimes torrents just refused to download anything at all too, it was pretty annoying. Wouldn't even pull metadata.
Maybe it's improved since the year or so since I dropped it, but the dev team seems to be going off the deep end with weird crypto fair-share downloading even as the bug trackers keeps growing.
It's a shame too because the idea of decentralized torrents is great.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Yeah I'm liking it a lot. One of the few I'm excited to watch every week this season.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Is there any way to git-send-mail to Github/lab projects? Most stuff I interact with is on Github
freely 3 years ago • 100%
I agree. Saved me a ton of time when I was importing an old iPod library that uses some crappy naming/folder scheme where they're all named with random letters.
It was able to correctly figure out all but maybe 15 songs out of hundreds, and then using the acustic fingerprinting it found all but the last few, which I did manually.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
https://libreelec.tv/ might be of some interest if you want a media Pi OS
freely 3 years ago • 100%
I've been using RPPAL to work on a Pi 4 and it works pretty well. Has good defaults & support for all the interfaces I'm using (GPIO, SPI). Good experience overall (once I figured out cross-compiling).
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Interesting article. Reminds me of that story of the guy outsourcing his work to Indian's at a low cost, except he did it so he could work less not more
freely 3 years ago • 100%
For me, it's quicker if I don't remember the exact file name or location. Just see a list, enter a dir, repeat. Instead of typing ls and cd, it's hjkl movement
freely 3 years ago • 100%
I'm really liking my Kailh Choc Purpz I got on my new board. The Choc White is also pretty nice, but I've only tested that one.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
I don't use NFT's personally, but isn't the idea to peove you own an asset, not just to serve it like a torrent would?
freely 3 years ago • 100%
I second this, but I think some of their personal configs go a bit overboard, at least the i3 version. I guess it's not really their "vision" to be a literal Arch install script though.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Where on the graph is my constant discovery of extremely niche features that I wish I knew a month ago when I needed it?
freely 3 years ago • 100%
I've used it for a while. Not sure how nnn compares, but it works well for me. Can set it up to render images with w3c, open PDFs in stuff like Zathura, etc.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Interesting. I currently run Jellyfin for myself & others, but would love to move to something that works a bit better.
The hard part is getting in to all the various app stores (smart tvs & smartphones mainly). I also couldn't find much info on what features it actually supports. I use basically everything Jellyfin offers (live TV, recordings, web radio, media playback, multiple playback sources, etc.), so I'd like to know that.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
alsa-lib
or crypto++
maybe? Not technically one person, but a majority of it is.
Maybe a bit pedantic, but I don't think Vim really applies since it's not a lib.
freely 3 years ago • 83%
Probably going to wait for reviews, but this seems very promising.
Does anyone know how well Waydroid runs 2FA and banking apps? I'm required to use a specific 2FA app, and would also like to keep using my bank's app for mobile check deposit. Not sure if Waydroid will cause any issues or not.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Sure they could, but why bother? There's already FOSS twitch-esque sites you can self-host.
Arguably, the real value in their site isn't even the code, but the streamers and their dedicated viewers. Not to mention the brand recognition and amount of new viewers that stumble into their site daily through Twitch being so big.
That's why Youtube and the now defunct Beam/Mixer always try/tried to buy up individual streamers - its where the real value is.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Maybe check out Krita.
Although what's wrong with GIMP? It might not be pretty, but I thought it was pretty feature-full.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
To be fair, the 10Gbps is only on my LAN between a single pc & server. I don't even have gigabit WAN.
6Mbps still sucks though. You'd be better off with an unlimited cellphone plan & a 5G router. Maybe? idk
freely 3 years ago • 100%
I run this on my home server. Useful for speed-testing your LAN on wired & wifi. Helped me find out my brand new TV gets approximately 10% the speed my phone from 2018 does, for whatever reason.
It's not reliable past 1Gbps though, as noted in their issue tracker. Mine caps out at about 3Gbps on a 10Gbps-capable line.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Mostly looks nice, but why would they get rid of the headphone jack? :(
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Or if you're into self-hosting https://github.com/ether/etherpad-lite
freely 3 years ago • 100%
I thought they wrote their own STT engine? Guess it was a TTS though.
After looking it up I do see what you're talking about though. They say they proxy everything so your IP doesn't touch the Google servers. But I also see you can run your own Mozilla DeepSpeech & use that instead, which seems like a decent option. It's just not the default.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
JS for embedded 🤔
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Mycroft https://mycroft.ai/
I've been waiting to get the v2 model, but it's taking so long I might make my own with a raspberry pi and their software.
freely 3 years ago • 85%
Tons of lighter services you can run. Even a media server is doable if you're direct streaming instead of transcoding. Just depends what you want really.
DNS (PiHole) is the super obvious choice, but you could do a personal VPN, email server, idk. The list is pretty endless.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
0 a.d. is pretty fun. I like messing around in either bot or online matches. It could use some QoL improvements though.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
https://github.com/Bitmessage/PyBitmessage/pulse/monthly this seems decently active? I don't know anything about this program though.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
The movement of a majority to gmail makes some sense. Android (and all other google services) basically forces users into making a google/gmail account. Not to mention people tend to flock to the same services once they start snowballing in popularity.
Before gmail, everyone (that I knew) was on AOL, which (probably) got its users from requiring accounts to use their network back in the day. I don't remember it that well though, so I might be wrong there..
freely 3 years ago • 77%
An echo chamber is a "safe space" where, in general, no one disagrees with some core idea/ideology. Thus with no differing opinion, people build on each other and strengthen their opinion that they are right.
Example: a nazi forum. Only nazis are allowed, anyone else gets banned. This removes the mere thought they could be wrong, and makes its nazi members more emboldened.
The same thing happens for all crap online - communists, leftists, white suppremists, pedophiles, dog fighters, BSD evangelists, whatever. Whether you are "right" isn't important, just removing any alternatives closes off your mind to the possibility of more.
TLDR: groupthink bubbles bad. Interacting with people of differing opinions is good. It's how we grow as people.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Too bad they ditched servo. I guess they're slowly writing parts in Rust instead?
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Kind of nuts so many companies don't do email verification. That would solve this issue more or less. Or just use a different domain like she mentions.
freely 3 years ago • 94%
Most people are under some naieve assumption that devs could just all work on the same thing, instead of spreading efforts across many projects.
Sure we'd probably get further if we all joined hands and sang kumbayah, but it doesn't work well in the real world. Lack of understanding, unfamiliarity with certain systems, no interest or desire, thinking the current system is a lost cause, etc. Many reasons it doesn't work.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Where did you get that info? Their site says it's 2 manufacturing defects in the battery.
Specifically it says
The problem consists of two LG manufacturing defects (a torn anode tab and folded separator) that, in rare circumstances, can simultaneously present in a single battery cell in the LG battery module.
Also, the Bolt does have battery heating/cooling last I checked. The Nissan Leaf, however, doesn't.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
On the upside, I bet a used Bolt will be really cheap now. Just need to wait for the fixed battery and it's a solid option.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
I use neither as well, although I did use QtCreator for a few weeks once, and its RAD (and vim mode) was nice for Qt dev.
The main features are the same across all IDE's - debugger, code completion, refactoring, linting, Git integration, and build systems support. I'm sure there's more, but like I said I don't use them so I can't name more.
Obviously VSCode can use plugins to do all this, same as many other editors. The line between IDE & text editor get blurry with plugins.
freely 3 years ago • 100%
Both are full IDE's though, to be fair. QtCreator even has a RAD for Qt which is really convenient.
Why do you say Qt for Linux isn't good? All the Qt programs (and KDE) I've used on Linux worked great.
It's not perfect, but I'm excited I might one day get to swap to Podman for better security. Probably wait till this closes for serious use though https://github.com/portainer/portainer/issues/5188
Any news on what this brings? I have no idea where to find the changelog lol