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2 yr. ago

If you like what I do, send me some Monero:

87ZN8URUY1M6GoXpxou4siDKJkLbLKDhT2RScrauzd4gbRyKgoY2ZX3Ut9WuMtkWebisViSE9EVRzVA1SD4kMdtAUPMiZBC

  • Reminds me of this post

    My attempt of reducing the insane UI buttons everywhere to make it a bit cleaner

    It is still way too much, and unlike other Qt apps (like QGIS for example) the panels are not all configurable.

    I am sure it is really great software, but this cosmetic issue makes it extremely overwhelming to newcomers. People just dont expect this load from anything.

  • Uhm you can use this to actually make the CW useful, and put it at the beginning ;)

     
        
    ::: spoiler Title
    Text
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  • Damn people pay that much? I get why people pay seedboxes, such a win

  • Hat jemand jemals solche Marken gebraucht?? Ich check Marken nicht

  • My CoPilot

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  • I didnt get it. Your manager replied instead of if?

  • That site sucks (Checking if your "connection" is "secure")

     
                Robotaxi drives into oncoming lane
            Rider presses “pull over”, Robotaxi stops in the middle of an intersection, rider gets out while Robotaxi blocks intersection for a few moments
            Rider presses pull over and the car just stopped in the middle of the road. Safety monitor has to call rider support to get car moving again
            Robotaxi doesn’t detect UPS driver’s reverse lights (or the car reversing towards it) and continues to attempt to park, then safety monitor manually stops it
            Robotaxi cuts off a car, then randomly brakes (potentially because of an upcoming tree shadow?)
            Robotaxi going 26 in a 15
            Robotaxi unexpectedly brakes, possibly due to nearby police
            Robotaxi unexpectedly slams on brakes, causing rider to drop phone
            Robotaxi comes to a complete stop after approaching an object, then runs it over (rider says it’s a shopping bag, though the car visibly bump up and down)
            Robotaxi runs over curb in parking lot
            Safety driver moved to driver seat to intervene
    
    
      
  • Bei Cookies helfen Adblocker. Zum Glück wird in der EU by default nichts akzeptiert. In den USA muss man tatsächlich allem widersprechen!

    Das ist aber was anderes, ist mir im ICE auch schon aufgefallen.

    Interessant, so ein "persönliches Bild" wie den ICE-Wifi-Dude im Interner zu sehen

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  • Yes but that is needed to avoid malicious usage

  • Jaaa ne nicht wirklich. Braucht viel länger, und zumindest die Laubart sollte man mit eintragen.

    Außerdem verleitet OSMand, pro Änderung einen Upload zu machen. Man kann den Upload auch wegklicken und (nicht sehr intuitiv) später alle restlichen hochladen.

    Einfach everydoor holen, ist am einfachsten. Vespucci fand ich anfangs schwierig, ist aber auch eigentlich super benutzbar.

  • Weiß nicht genau. Es gibt aber

    • Bäume und Gebüsche als Punkte
    • Baumreihen, Hecken, Gebüsche als Linien
    • Wälder, Gebüsch, usw. als Flächen

    Einen Wald sollte man auf jeden Fall als Fläche eintragen, und ich habe das Gefühl dass Flächen sehr viel mehr verwendet werden. Sieht auf Karten auch schöner aus und ist etwas sinnvoller (der Boden darunter ist ja nicht weiß/grau)

    Baumreihen sehen am komischsten aus, Bäume sind halt so punkte oder icons auf der Karte.

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  • True kinda. But if the network was between people who know each other a bit, it could make running an "exit node" more safe

  • Yes I see but no, I meant ActivityPub

  • Hängt von deiner Stadt bzw Community ab

    Ich kenne mehrere Städte, wo fast keine Bäume eingetragen sind. Und auch in einer Großstadt habe ich schon hunderte wenn nicht tausende Bäume eingetragen

  • I Learned Rust In 24 Hours To Eat Free Pizza Morally

    Sebastian Carlos

    Jun 6, 2025

    This is not just a story about pizza. As a recent Phoronix article explains, the Linux Rust subsystem got into major drama because of my humble quest.

    Well, here’s my side of the story, with every kernel of truth exposed.

    A Moral Quest for Pizza

    Despite being an experienced programmer, I found myself down in my luck financially — mostly as a result of taking extended sabbaticals to recover from burnout.

    I’m not one to handle prolonged contact with the overt authoritarianism of the typical HR department.

    My bank account was approaching a segmentation fault — I wish I’d held meme stocks a bit longer in 2021.

    So, I entered my familiar survival mode: Grinding LeetCode, writing job applications, and cutting luxuries like overpriced sushi delivery.

    One well-known hack for programmers in dire straits is, of course, the free food circuit of programming meetups. Luck had it that a Rust meetup was scheduled for the next day, with “pizza” explicitly mentioned in the event title.

    The catch? I had never touched Rust.

    Here’s where my conscience started throwing exceptions: I couldn’t just freeload pizza. I had to earn each slice.

    I had to become a Rustacean in just 24 hours.

    Ownership, lifetimes, the borrow checker — all of the Rust Book got dumped into my brain through copious amounts of cheap instant coffee and a sleepless night.

    Before leaving, I hyped myself up with some push-ups, and a shower to some 80’s synthwave, singing out loud Yazoo’s “Don’t Go” (a wise omen in retrospect). The Meetup

    I entered the co-working space, armed with the ability to nod knowingly at entry-level Rust concepts.

    The exposed bricks and Edison bulbs enhanced the feeling of limbo, neither fully “work” nor “social event.”

    Two hours in, the smell of pepperoni and Option

    <Pineapple>

    was filling the room as the ASCII progress bar of the last speaker’s fancy TUI slides had traversed just 25%. My stomach was sending system calls.

    The presentation ends, and the moment of truth arrives: The food table.

    I devised a plan to maximize intake and abstractly offset my monetary shortcomings. This military-grade operation involved timed passes around the table, making sure to take sizable but stealthy bites, and securing additional slices for consumption in a secluded area, only to return later for more.

    The first challenge came when a legitimate Rustacean started discussing lifetimes with me, one of the hardest topics.

    “That’s right…” I managed, “The lifetimes are… almost Husserlian.”

    He blinked. “Husserlian?”

    Did he see through my bluff? My only choice was to double down:

    “Yes the, uh, German philosopher… last name Husserl… You know, we experience time as conscious beings in a temporal horizon… All is Rust. You know, man?” My sleep-deprived brain attempted to pattern-match.

    He looked confused, then nodded, maybe mistaking my panic for depth. Mission accomplished. Another slice was mine.

    I was on my fourth “first” slice (plus three more surreptitiously eaten ones) and ready to leave, when someone mentioned the after-party. The After-Party

    What happened next exists in my memory like fragmented data blocks.

    I found myself in deep conversation with a group of Venezuelan femboy Rust developers who were building something revolutionary in the “post-capitalist space.” Their programming socks were striped pink, and their confidence in their technology was infectious.

    “You should buy crypto options,” one of them suggested. “I have a hunch about a meme coin. Trust me.”

    In my altered state after several Aperol spritzes, this seemed like sound financial advice. I FOMOed my tiny savings at the obscure coin with a logo of the Rust crab holding a bottle of coconut oil:

    Minutes later, impossibly, the value shot up 400%. Our phones buzzed with profit notifications. The only thing to do then was to celebrate by visiting that ketamine bar everyone had been whispering about.

    The Kernel Incident

    In our transcendent state, over hardcore techno music, we did what any group of intoxicated nouveau riche programmers would do: We pair programmed a patch to the Linux kernel’s Rust subsystem.

    It essentially replaced close to 50% of the codebase with Rust, thanks to some inspired macro magic and 100% use of our brainpower.

    The tests were passing until we got bored and terminated the test process.

    I considered the morality of sending such a huge patch on a whim, but I was operating under a different set of ethical principles at that point — ethics of a more cosmic nature.

    We submitted it at 6:47 AM with a commit message that just read: “The crab has awakened. Prima Nocta is imposed on all unsafe languages.”

     
        
    commit deadbeefb9e1d3f5a6c8e2b4d7f9a1c3e5b7d9f2a4c6e8b1d3f5a7c9e2b4d6f8a
    Author: Sebastian Carlos <sebastiancarlos@protonmail.com>
    Date:   Tue Jun 03 06:47:23 2025 +666
    
        The crab has awakened. Prima Nocta is imposed on all unsafe languages.
        
        Co-authored-by: Valentina Bitcoinia <val.php.lambo@cryptofemboys.xyz>
        Co-authored-by: Esperanza Rustacean <esperanza.zerocost@caracas.rs>
        Co-authored-by: Sir Borrow Checkington <sir.borrow.checkington@vatican.va>
        Tested-at:      The Ketamine Bar <qa@khole.io>
    
      

    Pure blackout after that. I woke up two days later in my apartment.

    The Reckoning

    Our Linux patch had not only been rejected but had apparently been the final straw for Linus Torvalds, who announced in a profanity-laden email that he was removing all Rust code from the kernel.

    “I’ve had it,” his email read. “At least C developers know when they’re drunk.”

    Phoronix was in uproar about the “Ketamine Kernel Incident.” My GitHub profile had become a cautionary tale.

    After soberly checking my earnings, I realized my $100 investment turned a profit of just $400 before fees and taxes. Not enough to quit my job hunt.

    In retrospect, the whole experience reminded me of my last job: Good intentions, moral compromises, and spectacular burnout.

    But the real shock came when I opened my wardrobe that evening, looking for clean clothes to wear to my job interview in a couple of hours:

    There was a collection of striped pink programmer socks. Dozens of them, like some sort of Rust swag. Where had they come from?

    But hey, at least I got pizza, and the socks were surprisingly comfortable.

    Thanks for reading. If you enjoyed this story and want to help me in these trying times, consider buying me a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/sebastiancarlos. But honestly, I’ll use the money for pizza.

  • Is there a federated HTML hosting solution?

  • You can also rip apart such a laptop if you really want headless. Otherwise, a screen is pretty handy!

    Funny thing is how to get the screen off if you are in a TTY. still not sure how!

  • I do like speakers next to the ears. Should be a requirement, so those people cant annoy everyone with way too loud music.

  • I recently thought about "muscle cars" in comparison to normal sports cars. Muscle cars are just heavy and slower cars with bigger motors, arent they?

    In the past I found them cool, but arent they pretty dumb?

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  • That video makes no sense

    A peer-to-peer VPN would be nice, with invites. Only secure if you use HTTPS only, as you would need to trust random people. But you would always have endpoints on residential IPs, meaning block resistance.