Fubarberry

joined 2 years ago
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[–] Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz 24 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

As an electrician, it's difficult to give good electrical advice over the internet.

First of all, you don't know how capable someone actually is at doing work. There's both a knowledge and a technique requirement for quality work. Bad electrical work can easily cause house fires and death, if I tell someone online how to fix an issue, and they electrocute themselves or burn down their house, I'm partially responsible for that.

Second, it's hard to give good advice on how something should be done without seeing it in person. Small details that are hard to get from a description or image can change how stuff is required to be done, and the code is complicated and has lots of exceptions and different requirements. Also different areas have different code requirements, and different AHJ requirements, so fully accurate advice has to come from an electrician in your actual area.

Final thing I'll mention is that getting qualified as an electrician is hard. Getting a full electrical license where I live requires 8 years of experience (4 years being directly supervised, then 4 years of light supervision). You also have to pass a pretty difficult exam, electricians usually spend 6+ months studying hard and taking training classes for the exam, and then it still has an abysmal first attempt pass rate and normally takes many attempts to eventually pass. Ultimately after all of that (8 years, months of focused study and classes, multiple test attempts), 25-30% of people are never able to pass and get their full license.

With all that considered, I'm happy to give advice to other electricians online. If they're already certified I can have some confidence that they have the knowledge and skills to do a good job with any advice given. However trying to give actually good, responsible advice to someone who is uncertified and a complete unknown on terms of skill/knowledge/location with only a partial knowledge of their problems and setup, it's hard. It's much easier to recommend they just get a licensed electrician from their area to take a look at it.

[–] Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz 8 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

...remembering how they had been served at the Whore-Kill, they went some ten or twelve miles higher, where they landed again and traded with the Indians, trusting the Indians to come onto their stores ashore, and likewise aboard their sloop drinking and debauching with the Indians until they were at last barbarously murdered, and so that place was christened with their blood and to this day is called the Murderer-Kill, that is, Murderers Creek.[11]

— George R. Stewart, Names on the Land: A Historical Account of Place-Naming in the United States

(this story of it's naming is now considered a folk tale)

[–] Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz 14 points 1 month ago (5 children)

True, but he's mainly wanting a keyboard setup for it. This is only slightly thicker than the keyboard by itself, and reduces the pieces he has to bring with him to keyboard + glasses.

There's also the added memory of a guy sitting in a coffee shot wearing sunglasses, typing away on a keyboard without a computer in sight. Should be an excellent start to roleplaying a blind schizophrenic at starbucks.

[–] Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz 3 points 1 month ago

Thanks for sharing this, I find the Amish practices and work arounds for technology really fascinating for some reason. I'd love to tour some of the more technology permissive Amish communities and learn about their rules and restrictions on its use, but unfortunately there's not any living in my area (not to mention needing to get approval to be shown around).

[–] Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz 4 points 1 month ago

With FBC Firebreak, I see a lot of steam reviews blaming the lack of game content. It sounds like the game was good during the closed alpha tests when weapons/unlocks were all available, but in an attempt to provide a slow drip feed of content, the final game is very barebones with most stuff locked behind free battlepass progression.

If that is the case, it's unfortunate that another potentially good game is being ruined by the live service model.

[–] Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz 11 points 1 month ago (2 children)

There are different Amish groups with different tolerances for technology. Some Amish are allowed to use electricity/etc as long as they generate it themselves instead of buying it from a power company for example. They have amish-specific low function computers they use for spreadsheets and the like.

Direct internet access is normally not allowed now, but I could imagine that's not universal or may not have been banned in the early days. Many modern Amish are allowed to use various work arounds for internet access, like fax services that they can fax a search to, and it will fax back screenshots of web results and websites.

[–] Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I tried jump ship, and it only got about 20fps in the starting area. Tweaking graphical settings didn't really seem to help, so I put it off to try on my PC later.

Does it get better performance later? Or did you find a better setting for it?

[–] Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz 20 points 1 month ago

Generally the same culture, but skewed towards more tech savvy types and online-centric culture groups. It's a lot smaller than reddit, which helps a lot with the quality of interactions, but I think if it grew enough it would end up very close to reddit culture.

[–] Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz 3 points 1 month ago

My favorite demo I played was Clover Pit, it's by the devs of Yellow Taxi Goes Vroom, and could lazily be described as balatro meets a slot machine. In reality it's more different from balatro, it has it's own retro horror vibe and some other interesting things going on. I enjoyed it, and found myself itching to play it more.

Nothing else clicked with me unfortunately. Jump Ship looked cool but didn't run well on the deck, Brave Junction is a blackjack StS type game by rideonjapan but didn't quite click with me. I tried a few other games but nothing hooked me.

[–] Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 month ago

FBC Firebreak is now officially steam deck verified as well

I'm excited for it as a remedy game, but I'm worried that it may be another example of a talented studio getting pushed into an unfamiliar multiplayer game, chasing trends. I also don't think the name is doing them favors, I don't think it's clear that it's tied to Control/Alan Wake universe enough to help sales, but it also doesn't feel suitable as a standalone game name either. Anyways we'll see how it goes, hopefully it will be great and be really successful.

[–] Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I'd recommend looking at the articles I linked, I probably should have refreshed my memory on them better before commenting.

In addition to knowing that valve is working on compatibility layers for running x86 on arm devices, there was also a steamVR update 9 months ago contains files for an ARM device code named deckard. There's probably more relevant leaks too, I think some renders of deckard controllers got leaked at some point as well.

[–] Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz 2 points 2 months ago

Supposedly they were working on an inhouse one, and then changed directions to just do software tweaks for other companies hardware instead.

It definitely needs some background process limiting, comparing official windows vs official steamOS on that Lenovo legion Go showed pretty terrible performance impact from running windows.

 

Mostly sharing this for Marvel Rivals, since Indiana Jones still probably runs poorly on Deck due to mandatory ray tracing.

Indiana Jones did get both the green eye bug fixed and improved FSR support recently though, so it is in better shape on deck now than ever before.

 

It has flip out thumb stick locks to protect the thumb sticks as well, and can be used as a kickstand in the back of the deck.

It's on Kickstarter right now. Seems like an interesting idea, although I think I'll stick to cases like the Killswitch/modcase for protecting my deck in a backpack.

 

From the linked patch notes:

  • Reduced polling rate while the Steam Frame Limiter is active to save additional power. This can save up to 6% on battery life when running at 30fps in a low-power game like HL2
 

For anyone unfamiliar with DeckFilter, it's an android/iphone app that lets you view info on games from your library and wishlist.

For games it will show you:

  • Deck verification status
  • ProtonDB rating
  • Steam user rating
  • HowLongToBeat times
  • Steam tags
  • IsThereAnyDeal prices (wishlist games only)
  • Game settings from ShareDeck
  • Links to game's Steam page, PCGamingWiki, SteamDB, SteamBase, and SteamCharts.

The app also lets you filter your library/wishlist by things like compatibility, tags, ratings, how long to beat, and more. It's a really good way to pick out games to play.

The app just got updated with much faster sync (up to 10x faster), fixed wishlist sync, IsThereAnyDeal integration, steam API support (no longer requires your steam library to be public), sort library by last played, and more. See here for full changelog.

 

I'd also recommend SteamDeckHQ's recommended couch co-op games list. This one isn't limited to games $5 and under.

 

So Decky-Dication is a really cool plugin that lets you use voice typing in game mode. The github is here, but unfortunately they were never able to get the plugin small enough for it to be in the Decky store, and the project has since been abandoned.

Luckily, the plugin still works really well. You can build it yourself from the github, or if you're trusting enough you can download an already built .zip file here.

Once you have the plugin file, unzip it on your deck, and move it to the homebrew/plugins folder. That folder is usually write protected, so you may need to move it using a terminal command (ie if you extracted the folder on the desktop, the command would be sudo mv ~/Desktop/decky-dication ~/homebrew/plugins. Then switch back to game mode and it should be in your plugin list.

Once the plugin is installed, you press steam+b+L2 to start speech to text, and then steam+b+r2 to disable it.

 

Sorry this discussion post is a bit late, I should probably set a reminder for it.

 

It's debatable whether this belongs in the Steam Deck community, but these are all high profile games, and having to login with additional online accounts is a significant barrier to play on the Deck.

 

You can check battery health in desktop mode, by clicking on the battery.

I've had my OLED deck for a little over a year now, and it's still reporting 100% battery health.

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