Skip Navigation

Posts
8
Comments
575
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • money

    Jump
  • Honestly, not at all. If CS paid like shit I'd still do it. Out of all the things it's just what I enjoy most. Studying CS didn't feel like something I had to do but rather something I wanted to do most of the time. Programming is like solving puzzles but then much cooler

  • A channel that's missing here which I personally really like is TimeGhost history and their other channels World War Two and The Korean War. Their coverage of world war two in real time (which they finished already) was especially great. I'm not necessarily the biggest history nerd, but there's something quite enjoyable about following history "live" this way.

  • Yeah okay but Cyberpunk 2077 and No Man's Sky were new games, not an ancient game that should easily run on a Switch 2 but somehow doesn't. And even then it required an insane turnaround before people loved them again. Cyberpunk has undergone a crazy transformation since launch and it's all for free (as should be expected when you release a dumpster fire).

    This is not an easy thing, and not something you can keep doing constantly. Bethesda seems to be on a roll with releasing broken, overpriced, boring shit for a while now. And constantly milking Skyrim. There are plenty other games that I personally have played that aren't there yet in this timeline either. Cities Skylines 2 just got a new developer and is still not that great, I don't they'll turn it around. Stalker 2 is on the right path (and I personally really liked it on launch and even more now), yet a lot of fans still seem pissed and the game is still properly janky. Pulling a Cyberpunk is the exception, not the rule

  • Idk, if it gets too bad you should take something. But suppressing a flu will not help you in any way, it is your body's defence mechanism. You'll only be prolonging the suffering just to have some temporary relief. Instead of popping pills and keeping going, we should be listening to our bodies and taking some rest. That being said, using pain killers etc to get good sleep is a good use, because getting proper rest is the only way to heal quickly of illness.

  • Damn that's very lucky. Every device with Nvidia hardware that I installed Linux on has at some point during updates or whatever gone to shit. However I must say that it has become way better in recent years. My Thinkpad was the worst because it was my first Linux device and it had an integrated Intel gpu and a dedicated Nvidia GPU and getting it to work was horror. In the end a friend of mine who was better at Linux just forced it to always use the Nvidia card because then at least stuff worked reliably (tm).

    But even then it pretty much always died during Ubuntu release updates. I've nuked my whole system once because the screen went black (due to GPU drivers presumably) during one and after an hour or so I forcefully turned off the laptop because I couldn't do anything anymore. After restarting into a tty my laptop was in some sort of limbo between 2 Ubuntu versions and I basically just had to reinstall.

    Ever since I made Linux (Arch btw) my main OS for gaming at the start of this year it has been quite stable though. I did switch to LTS kernels and after that everything has been pretty chill.

  • In terms of performance yeah. Though not every old device keeps working. You're still vulnerable to driver support for newer kernels. My old Thinkpad no longer functions properly because the Nvidia drivers are not compatible with newer kernels. I can either have an unsafe machine that runs fine or an up-to-date machine that can barely open a web browser.

  • Compared to most of my friends I'm not into food tbh. But not in the way that I don't care about it. I'll generally eat whatever and like it. I can enjoy a microwave meal or a frozen pizza. And I get very impatient with people who insist that the rice needs to dry to the air for god knows how long because it makes the taste better. Cooking is something I used to hate, so I'd always go the easy route. Either a microwave meal or something like pasta with pre-cut vegetables and premade sauce from the supermarket.

    Nowadays I have changed to a diet with more vegetables and less overprocessed stuff, so I tend to just grab some veggies and throw them in a pan with some meat (or replacement), some random herbs and spices and a little bit of pasta or rice. Sometimes it's nice, sometimes it sucks, but I don't really care because I'll eat almost anything and I hate throwing away food. Most important to me is that it's healthy most of the time. But I don't really care for recipes or spending time to prepare something nice, I have better ways to spend my time. I also really like my rice to be sticky, so I don't really waste time on washing the rice either.

  • The thing in the top of the image is definitely weird. But honestly I think it's just a real image. Too many small details like the mesh of the suitcase that I wouldn't expect gen AI to get right. I think the third wheel on the right makes sense tbh. It's probably just a suitcase with 4 wheels that's folded open. Due to the perspective it looks a little offset but that's reasonable. I'm not a 100% sure tho, it's hard to tell sometimes these days

  • Uhmmmm can I also teleport back from Albania? If so, then sure. I hate travelling so I never really go far, being able to go to Albania and back at the blink of an eye would be chill. Going for a nice lunch walk and then teleport back. Otherwise I'll go with the eye colour I guess, the rest is useless.

  • Most people I know who do that use them as kinda bookmarks. Tbh, I do also sort of do this on my phone. I keep some tabs open with stuff I still wanted to check out. And every now and then I go through them and close the ones I don't need. But on PC I just close the whole session with all tabs when I'm done

  • :3

  • The person who wrote this must be absolutely insane. How I'd it a bad thing for the world that people are holding on to their devices? Less e-waste and people don't spend impulsively. It's also very logical: smartphones reached a plateau and people aren't exactly swimming in money with the rising price of everything.

  • Thanks for sharing! I personally use Darktable and negadoctor, but honestly this doesn't look too complicated either. Sometimes it's very hard to get consistent results. Usually there's not one set of settings to gets me satisfying results for all photos on a roll (usually due to tinted lighting, under/overexposure, etc). I tried using the first part of the roll, where there's usually a fully exposed and fully unexposed part, for tuning the initial values. But this also doesn't always deliver consistent results. Usually it's a lot of back and forth between different photos.

  • Ice skating and/or inline skating. Not sure how safe that is to do for so long, but I like going fast.

  • Yeah I feel like anyone who blames Linus for this is missing the point. Was it dumb, yes, but if we want the average (or even a bit tech-savy) Windows gamer to transition to Linux then the distro they use needs to be resistant to this. Most people don't read shit, they just want things to work so they can play their games. And they'll happily click through multiple warnings to get there.

  • Fun fact, this loop is kinda how one of the generative ML algorithms works. This algorithm is called Generative Adversarial Networks or GAN.

    You have a so-called Generator neural network G that generates something (usually images) from random noise and a Discriminator neural network D that can take images (or whatever you're generating) as input and outputs whether this is real or fake (not actually in a binary way, but as a continuous value). D is trained on images from G, which should be classified as fake, and real images from a dataset that should be classified as real. G is trained to generate images from random noise vectors that fool D into thinking they're real. D is, like most neural networks, essentially just a mathematical function so you can just compute how to adjust the generated image to make it appear more real using derivatives.

    In the perfect case these 2 networks battle until they reach peak performance. In practice you usually need to do some extra shit to prevent the whole situation from crashing and burning. What often happens, for instance, is that D becomes so good that it doesn't provide any useful feedback anymore. It sees the generated images as 100% fake, meaning there's no longer an obvious way to alter the generated image to make it seem more real.

    Sorry for the infodump :3

  • Often

    Jump
  • Yes, until I found that when you start ignoring the lights as a habit, at some point your body and brain just stop doing stuff. I got myself in a burn-out by ignoring tiredness, stress, and all kinds of random issues. Please listen before you get yourself there, it's not very easy to get out.

  • The people who use it happily don't make memes about it. I do have some weird errors every now and then, it's definitely not as stable for me as X11. However X11 wasn't very smooth with my multi monitor setup, and Wayland improved the smoothness of my PC enormously, so the random issues every now and then are worth it

  • Is it? I doubt there are many fibers in there. Unless you count the tomato sauce it doesn't really contain a lot of vegetables either. I'd be really surprised if tomato sauce on the average pizza is healthy, it's probably so over processed that all the fibers and vitamins etc are gone and it's just a big carb nuke. And a pizza contains too much fat as well. A good pizza might be decent compared to most fast food, but I can't imagine the average fastfood or supermarket pizza being a healthy meal.