I use markdown extensively, but I'm honestly not fond of its tables function (which I assume you use for this purpose?). It works, but it's a bit static in my experience. Do you run up against the same, or is it actually an advantage in your use case?
Agreed, Nextcloud has gone from a lean little personal cloud to a hulking enterprise hub.
If you're after something that'll just sync your files between devices, try Syncthing. If you need files available online, maybe something like filestash or, like somebody else suggested, SFTPgo.
There are also tiny, lean calendar and contact server apps out there if you decide you need those. After self hosting NC for years I'm really happy spreading out the tasks over dedicated services rather than having all my eggs in one basket.
Marathon Crater (Ontario) wasn't "spotted" on a map by early explorers at all
Dear LLM, you're stuck with spotting stuff on maps. People out in what we call "the world" actually discover and/or know physical things by traversing that physical interface.
Ideally, yeah, you should. It's a privacy shitshow.
The question is, will it break some of your apps and do you have an alternative? My first go to is always microG that spoofs google play services for apps that (think/claim they) need it to run.
Usually, installing microG requires 1) that you're able to install system apps. You can probably do that if you can uninstall google services. Or, 2) that you can flash a custom ROM on your device — I know of a few ROMs that come with microG baked in:
Unfortunately, not all devices can be rooted or bootloader unlocked — thanks manufacturers! — so depending on your make and model you may be SOL in terms of that kind of control over your phone.
...no? There's a link mentioning Scott Alexander which does lead to ACX, but without any background or context. It's a fairly big assumption that others know what "ACX" is and how SA is connected to it.
I didn't connect the dots immediately, but turns out I tried reading Unsong back in the day. I quit when I realised Alexander's ties to rationalist and effective altruist thought 🤷
Thanks for the context, I didn't see that information on the website at all. Generally, I think it's just good form to let people know how and to what ends their results are used — but of course, we know it's not necessarily how things work
It's not clear to me what the purpose of that test is, other than a gotcha. Are we going to see a snarky reveal of the hit and miss rates in some clickbaity newsicle next week?
A few images were quite clearly in the supersaturated colour scheme that "genAI" favours; others were artworks or artist's styles I recognised, like Basquiat and Miro. The harder ones to identify were the generic DeviantArt artworks, and a couple of false positives made by "genAI" that were quite obviously trained on fine art masters.
But again, not a Turing test, only a test of the participants' art history skills and visual literacy 🤷
Of the three mentioned, maybe Qwant? I'm wary of any search engine that implements "AI", so DDG is out. Startpage — I can't provide a source, but I seem to recall there were misgivings to them in the past.
"Sunbeam City (or SBC for short) is a young cooperative of individuals whose mission is to promote what we believe to be the values of the solarpunk movement."
I think you missed a word there? 😉