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Posts
2
Comments
255
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • I used Edge for business tasks. Not like work task, or normal browsing, etc. But figured if someone was going to send me an excel document, if I say “well I opened it in edge" when it breaks, it avoids some problems.

    But with the latest updates they've really been "Microsofting" it hardcore. Chrome dialogs with broken buttons, impossible to use combined tabs behaviour, dead end settings pages with no controls, crashes, slower and slower browsing...

    It's becoming such a disaster I can't even use it for that anymore. Now this? Thank god Firefox is still around. Legit hearing people talking about it again...

  • Yeah I get that, but I just switched between the latest GNOME and the latest plasma and it looks the same to me

  • I didn't realize they where different. What does KDE do better for you?

  • Good enough, dependable. 😅

  • Yeah I'm tired of the GNOME hate so I checked out pretty quick and here's a rant.

    I basically, I want 2 things.

    1. A WM that just works with modern interfaces.
    2. A DE that disapears 99% of the time when I'm actually using my computer and shows me just enough to get to my next task when I ask.

    GNOME does this. In my opinion KDE doesn't.

    If the process of making your prettiest UI is the thing you're using your computer for then KDE seems optimized for you but that's not me.

    I don't want to see the UI. I don't want to spend time messing with the UI. I want to make it small and black the first time I log in. Maybe change a keybind. Then I want to split screen a terminal and a browser and get to work.

    This is GNOME. It's fine. Stop crapping on people who like that and

    And before you asked, I daily drove KDE for several years like a decade ago but got tired of fighting with it. I tried KDE again late last year and it's gotten a lot better and I'm sure someone committed enough could trim it down the way I want. I tried a couple times and to its credit, I almost got there before getting hidden widgets or broken widgets that caused me to wipe everything and start over. I used to crash the widget manager regularly so it seemed better. But it felt slower and I never was really happy with it so... Not worth the effort.

  • Yeah it sucks, but when we rise it's like strawberry fields.

  • Yeah... All the tools in Linux are going to do this weird thing where they expect it to behave like a normal key. So you'd have to do all the hacks mentioned to make it work. For example, GNOME keybind stops detecting the key bind when you release. Etc. Maybe the kernel will accept a “broken copilot key hack“ that implements it but it's not good.

    Even with hacks, it still won't work like a modifier like most people use alt/ctrl/win because those rely on knowing the key up to see multiple keys pressed together before release. So... Broken.

  • As a Linux gamer, nvidia was already on thin ice.

    Also I had past them up on recentish purchases since they only really controlled the highest end of the market which I don't have the budget for. So honestly I have no intention of welcoming them back unless there is literally no other option. You made your bed.

  • Kind of makes sense really when you think about it. The vast majority of consumers have had all their wealth eroded over decades to the point no one can buy anything. Better to let the AIs buy everything now.

  • 2 points to consider.

    1. Humans can't digest the entirety of the internet
    2. Humans transform through lived experience. At worst current ai is just the statistical correlation of existing information at best you could say a model is trained by a humans experience. Neither are the same.

    I don't think llms are without value, but treating them like they think or create new things is the problem imho.

  • As soon as I said that, I realized Ive not had the problem with keyboards but constantly replace mi e switches.

    Here's a video about that digs into why

    https://youtu.be/v5BhECVlKJA

  • Apparently it's what I'm electronics is called bounce. Because we live in the real world, a metallic switch can't make full connection instantly. Lots of messy things happen as the metal approaches. Arcing, uneven contact, physical bouncing, etc.

    Its actually a bit hard to solve but lots of ways to deal with this. Stiffer/faster contact, slower polling, debounce circuits, software algorithms...

    I've not experienced this but I assume what the poster is experiencing is aging copper intersecting with "higher is better“ polling rates for marketing, and cut costs.

  • Yeah, I think that was not the case during their recent lawsuit with Apple. So relatively recently that changed and was limited for a "good" reason.

    No Linux support though so whatever. Useless to me.

  • Not normal for me but I recently opted in to Firefox's telemetry so they could see all the trouble I'm going through to turn off their new features in their reporting.

    Will it change their mind? Probably not. But at least it'll be there in the numbers

  • That's a tough one. Those small points hanging ledges pose a lot of problems for printers and petg is not a forgiving filament type.

    As others have said, petg can be a harder filament to print. Even dry it tends to be more viscous leading to oozing, stringing. I'm not convinced that's the problem but it could be part of it as build up from stinging or over extrusion can cause collisions leading to something like this.

    The damage looks like it's happening on one side. That hints at either a cooling problem or some movement or seam placement problem.

    Looking at pictures of your printer it looks like it has too fans so I suspect that side had direct cooling and the openness means it's probably not getting a wall that would affect it.

    Related to movement, speed/acceleration could be an issue. You might have heard scratching while printing in this area. If so slight warping during cooling or from over extrusion could lead the nuzzle colliding. On a more solid print you could probably get away with ignoring it as it wouldn't affect the print but with such small parts small impacts over time will lead to knocking parts off or distorting them. Try slowing down the print. Most of the print here is delecate but you can do that in modifiers if you want other parts of the print to be fast.

    Not sure how much that adds or helps but good luck.

  • I guess sort of.

    I always saw them as cited as ad ridden and the complexity of recipe copyright (you can copyright a story but not a recipe).

    But I guess there's a convergence in that the Google ad ecosystem relied on SEO nonsense and the quality varied pretty widely so some sites where just aggregated bad recipes optimised to get ad views.

    There where enough real sites and the bad ones where easy enough to sniff out that it seemed a reasonable compromise at the time.

  • I cut the drivers (not the company) slack for some of this sort of stuff. I had a friends dad that delivered for UPS apparently the expectations are impossible. You don't leave till deliveries are done but it's not possible to do in a normal day. Marking things delivered that weren't was apparently the only way to see his family sometimes.

  • For me it's been such a night and day experience it's hard to imagine needing to explain why Wayland has been better. But I'll try.

    The big thing that got me to switch was actual multi-monitor support. X has a bunch of hacks that "work" but it's a mess and constantly broke for me. I'd just randomly log in and it was broken and I'd spend a day in xrand a x11 conf files re-building it from scratch for no apparent reason. Wayland multi-monitor has just worked for years now. It's also real mutlidisplay support and really quite good.

    Ive seen complaints about Nvidia but even with them dragging their heels I've had a better experience with their drivers on Wayland. Probably tied again to multi monitor bit it's just been smoother and I notice if I accidentally log in to an X session even on a single monitor setup because things are clunky and features missing.

    Anecdotally DEs feel like they start faster and work smoother. I saw fewer crashes after switching as well. The crashing might be better these days then but I don't see a reason to test it.

    For the sake transparency, it's not perfect. Compatibility really has been great and I struggle to tell what's not native. But I mean this is Linux desktop and there are challenges regardless of your choices.

    I enjoyed guake terminal. It's a bit troublesome to make work well.

    The one other thing that's been troublesome is some screen capture stuff. Honestly the screen sharing in Wayland lovely and so much better when it work.

    But some programs do their own thing and want full desktop control and that's a struggle. For example moonlight/sunshine require what seems to be some extra tinkering. Similarly screen collaboration apps that try to do the full control thing tend to not work well or at all.

  • I assumed you would understand I meant the short part of your statement describing the LLM. Not your slight dig at me, your setting up the question, and your clarification on your perspective.

    So you be more clear, I meant "The IIm doesn't consider a negative response to its actions due to its training and context being limited"

    In fact, what you said is not much different from the statement in question. And you could argue on top of being more brief, if you remove "top of mind" it's actually more clear. Implying training and prompt context instead of the bot understanding and being mindful of the context it was operating in.

  • 3DPrinting @lemmy.world

    Inline filament drying prototype

  • 3DPrinting @lemmy.world

    Printable make posting locked behind purchase?