Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)V
Posts
1
Comments
105
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • The value proposition of old or used android phones as SBCs is insane! You've probably got some in your drawers, or can at worst buy some carrier locked ones for 30$. You get a device with better compute than a raspberry pi, with a screen, cameras, speakers, flashlight and battery attached!

    Personally, I use them to run and monitor my 3d printers.

  • I love it. now I don't need to bring a controller in ADDITION to my steamdeck when I come visit!

  • "Bringing together all of our AI offerings, we introduce Copilot-Copilot!"

  • something to consider here... Firefox lazy-loads out of focus tabs when you start it, so if you're a tab hoarder, it's nice for just the one active tab per window to load when you start the browser.

    I'm not sure that you can get it to do the same with "out of focus" windows. or maybe I have a tab hoarding problem.

  • Putting aside the fact that this is a bit of a straw man, multiple countries having nuclear capability is the only thing preventing nuclear war. Russia does not nuke the US (or allies) because they know the US will respond with a nuclear launch of its own. same for the other way around. Awareness and access to similar capabilities makes everyone think twice about becoming the aggressor. if I had to pick, a cold war is preferable to a hot one.

  • Then what are we even discussing? we've had orbital cameras for decades. These are just networked better and launched different?

  • Do you have any particular pieces of theirs you can recommend I read?

    I don't consider Musk, by any means, to be "a good guy". Ideally, I'd just rather let SpaceX keep building out starlink for the good of the world and have it be a medium for communication that is difficult to disable.

    Why do we need to kill our enemies at this point in our civilization even? it's barbaric and ridiculous. The state of the art of weaponry right now is trending towards remote operations. How long until it just becomes BattleBots but with collateral damage? When do we get to world leaders settling disputes in a game of Worms?

  • So that the US government can more directly use starlink for surveillance?

  • Surveillance is a usecase for communication. I can't think of a communications technology that hasn't been (ab)used for surveillance... Books even! Historically people have been prosecuted due to the books they possess! Should our target of ire be the entity building the network? Or the entity wanting to use it for surveillance? The vibe I'm getting from this thread is that folks would prefer the US government, via NASA or otherwise, have control of the whole thing instead.

  • I didn't like the random blinking and glitchiness the screen did as it changed resolutions. Most OSes, if you notice, do a little fade out and in but I was too lazy to make it gradual.

  • Eh, though you're right, it's a pattern I like a lot: define your "main" at the top, put all the supporting functions below, and call main at the end.

    These days I've got a little bash task runner framework that I use for little scripts like this.

  • Science fiction of the 90s was the time to discuss philosophy. We didn't come to a conclusion then. The future is now. A global low latency, highly available communications network is technologically inevitable. In our timeline, a rich narcissist has gathered enough support and competence around himself to start building that network. So now we have real, concrete questions that need answers: who should have access to that network, and who should decide?

    The way I see it, the options are (besides opening the network for everyone globally):

    • limit access to non-military purposes: practically impossible
    • limit access to the country of which Elon calls himself a citizen: what happens if he moves?
    • destroy the network: everyone is worse off
    • have the government take over control of the network: I don't think we want this precedence

    Do you have another suggestion?

  • Would you rather he, as a non-government affiliated citizen, pick a side? War is stupid. Communication is great. Maybe this is naive of me, but I think the world would be better, and maybe require less war, if everyone had equal access to communication.

  • I have a stupid little script for this:

     
        
    #!/bin/sh
    
    setres() {
      output=$1
      width=$2
      height=$3
    
      xrandr --output $output --brightness 0 --auto
      xrandr --delmode $output better
      xrandr --rmmode better
    
      xrandr --newmode better $(cvt $width $height | tail -n1 | cut -d'"' -f3)
      xrandr --addmode $output better
      xrandr --output $output --brightness 1 --mode better 
    }
    
    setres "$@"
    
    
      
  • on my car, there's a fuse you can pull out, which theoretically cuts power to OnStar. check your car manual/forums about your model

  • Gen 2 chevy volt owner here, PHEVs are absolutely not a step back. If I didn't buy the volt, the one car our family could afford would have been an ICE car. IMO, these things help bridge idealism with current reality - for most of my day-to-day, I drive a fully electric car. I just also get the option to toss some gas into it when on a long road trip.

  • For some good fiction, that puts this in context, check out:

    • Ex Machina (2005) which is nominally about an AI beating the turing test, but really more of an illustration of that AI in a box problem.
    • Snow Crash (1992) which is about a future where the two professions remaining on earth are software development and pizza delivery.