ProdigalFrog

joined 2 years ago
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[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 2 points 1 month ago

Ah! sorry, posted the link to the trailer instead of the full doc. Link should be fixed now. Thanks for the heads up.

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 5 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Perhaps !boardgames@slrpnk.net might be a community better suited to this topic?

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 52 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (2 children)

What you're witnessing here is described in When Prophecy Fails, a study on cults and how they justify continued belief after experiencing events that should disprove their belief.

Cult members will simply invent new reasons to continue their belief and remove the cognitive dissonance they may feel, which oddly results in a further entrenched belief, instead of a weakened one.

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Union membership declined from 2023 to 2024 to under 10% of the US workforce, despite a high public approval.

I think Bernie explaining to people how unionizing could be weaponized against the regime would help, and particularly if he endorsed the IWW; a more militant union who are not corporate captured, nor only seek increased wages and are then become pacified as other more normal trade unions tend toward. The IWW is the only worker-led anti-capitalist union in the US.

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (5 children)

It’s just that there is little to nothing the average viewer can do to make it happen.

There are some tremendously powerful actions Bernie could be suggesting we do to fix this mess.

For example, he could be publicly calling for people to:

  1. Perpare for and participate in a general strike, which would target the establishment's income streams, and is capable of bringing a fascist government to its knees if done on a large enough scale. Immigrant farm workers are already potentially going forward with this plan of action.
  2. Contact a grassroots decentralized union like the IWW and attempt to unionize your workplace so that the general strike is even more effective (plus, ya know, better pay and working conditions as a bonus!)

Vaguely calling for the end of oligarchy instead of loudly calling for those very actionable steps is a bit of a missed opportunity for the resistance.

However, If we put in the work, we can resist this and we can win. Look at how effective the above mentioned methods were when used in Chile in 2019.. If we completely reject the political system and rebel on a mass scale, there is NOTHING they can do to stop us.

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 5 points 1 month ago

I suspect it's potentially due to relations with Russia going slightly sour, as Russia is the largest exporter of asbestos.

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 5 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

You can read more about it here: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Debian-More-Newcomers-LLMs

They also seem to have voted on this subject back in may, but I don't know how to find the results: https://www.debian.org/vote/2025/vote_002#secondsa

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 32 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (4 children)

He wouldn't have any problem whatsoever if Debian was publicly endorsing right wing views and losing leftist contributors.

Linux and the GPL FOSS movement is inherently leftist, snd right wingers have been wailing about leftist views in various FOSS projects for over a decade. I recall many threads on reddit accusing Linus of having been made 'woke' by his daughter when the CoC was introduced, back during the gamergate era.

It's all the same shit, all the same complaints, and all a waste of time. As the US descends into extreme fascism to the cries of approval of the MAGA cult, it becomes harder and harder to stomach them in a project.

The more concerning thing going on is Debian potentially embracing AI, which I am very much not a fan of.

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I really, really like the logo you have for it. It's snazzy AF :)

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 9 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (6 children)

Piefed is another reddit-like forum that is federated using ActivityPub (the same underlying tech that Lemmy uses).

Piefed is very similar to Lemmy functionally, and the creator designed it specifically to be as compatible with lemmy as possible so they can communicate with each other without a problem. You can even visit piefed communties from your lemmy, like !animation@piefed.social or !fullmoviesonyoutube@piefed.social.

Piefed is already compatible with a couple of lemmy mobile apps, like Interstellar and Voyager, so if we were to switch SLRPNK to a piefed instance, you would be able to continue to use those apps, if you already are used to them. You can also make the mobile web page itself into a web app.

The Web UI will be different from lemmy, which you can test at Piefed.social to see what it'd be like. We'd very likely create a custom theme for it similar to our existing lemmy one.

Piefed has some neat features unique to it, such as:

  • a very nice gallery view for image heavy communities.
  • the ability to combine comments from multiple communities under one post, if the same link was posted to all of them. You can see an example of that here (notice how the comments have dividers for each community).
  • the ability to create and subscribe to a pre-made list of communities, sorta like a multi-reddit.

On the sysadmin side of things, it'd bring some nice advantages regarding network resource usage.

So overall, it hopefully wouldn't bring many downsides, besides potentially having to learn and get used to a new UI (though Photon, which we host as an alternative web UI, will soon support it as well, making the experience pretty much identical if you're already used to that).

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 2 points 1 month ago

I think Mint can be a bad option if someone has newer hardware, but the onboarding process is just so butter smooth for non-techies. From what I recall of bazzite, the onboarding process for someone completely unfamiliar to Linux isn't the best.

And while Mint is bad for new hardware, Bazzite can be sort've the opposite problem. I have a laptop with switchable graphics that has massive glitches with Wayland still. Since Fedora dropped X11 support entirely, Bazzite unfortunately inherited that, making it impossible to use on my hardware. However, Mint worked with it flawlessly thanks to it still supporting X11.

The immutability aspect of Bazzite could be a massive strength for new users if they focused on their onboarding process.

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 2 points 1 month ago

Hm, I thought he mentioned it in his 6.4 juicy video, but I can't find it either. Apologies, I must have confused it with something else.

I did manage to find this rounded corners proposal, and unfortunately it doesn't look like it'll be in kwin anytime soon.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/31873281

  • The EU Citizens petition to stop killing games is not looking good. It's shy of halfway where it needs to be, on a very high threshold, and it's over in a month and change.
  • paraphrasing a little more than a half hour of the video: "Man, fuck Thor/Pirate Software for either lying or misunderstanding and signal boosting his incorrect interpretation of the campaign."
  • The past year has been quite draining on Ross, so he's done campaigning after next month.
  • It will still take a few years for the dust to clear at various consumer protection bureaus in 5 different countries, and the UK's seems to be run by old men who don't understand what's going on.
  • At least The Crew 2 and Motorfest will get offline modes as a consolation prize?
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/31873281

  • The EU Citizens petition to stop killing games is not looking good. It's shy of halfway where it needs to be, on a very high threshold, and it's over in a month and change.
  • paraphrasing a little more than a half hour of the video: "Man, fuck Thor/Pirate Software for either lying or misunderstanding and signal boosting his incorrect interpretation of the campaign."
  • The past year has been quite draining on Ross, so he's done campaigning after next month.
  • It will still take a few years for the dust to clear at various consumer protection bureaus in 5 different countries, and the UK's seems to be run by old men who don't understand what's going on.
  • At least The Crew 2 and Motorfest will get offline modes as a consolation prize?
 

Say you're a solarpunk writer without an editor, but still want a second pair of eyes to proof read your writings.

A grammar checking program can be very useful to catch things that you may miss even after doing a full pass of your work. And to clarify, a grammar checker differs from a spell checker, in that it can spot differences in past vs. present tense, active vs. passive voice, style, and incorrect use of a word within the context of a sentence.

Unfortunately, there are few options on the market currently for creative writers, as most are catered toward business or technical writing. Let's take a look at what's currently out there.


ProWritingAid

First up is ProWritingAid. It's often touted as the premier option for fiction authors, but at $400 for a lifetime license, I'd bet it's likely out of reach for most. A monthly subscription could be used temporarily on a book-by-book basis, but personally I despise subscriptions, and refuse to consider it for my own use.

I purchased the lifetime license to trial it a couple years ago, and found it to have many false positives, to be extremely buggy (both as a browser extension and in its own native app), and unergonomic to actually use due to poor UI and layout. It made going through a lengthy manuscript a chore. To add insult to injury, they have since gone full-hog into adding AI into the program instead of focusing on usability or stability.

Overall, an absolute ripoff for the high price. To their credit, they did honor their refund policy quickly and easily.

Grammarly

I found Grammarly's free service to be superior to ProWritingAid in regards to UI and UX, but it's only available as a subscription to access all the grammar features, and they have also gone the AI route, deeply integrating it into the app. Lastly, I experienced quite a few false positives or conflicts with style, making it still not ideal for creative writers. That combined with the AI and subscription requirement make it a No-Go for me.

Quillbot

Last is Quillbot, which produced perhaps the best results of the three, even with the free service. Unfortunately it also requires a subscription for advanced grammar checking, and uses AI. Most critically, it's not a local service, meaning you're putting your entire manuscript up in a cloud somewhere. Only the expensive Team License gets you Data control. No-go.


That's pretty much everything worth mentioning on the market, so what now? Forgo a grammar checker entirely? Put up with a subscriptions and using AI?

The surprising answer brings us back to the 90's, more specifically, to an old tool called Grammatik

Grammatik was once a stand-alone grammar checker from the early 80's, but was later purchased by WordPerfect (WP) and incorporated into the WordPerfect Office Suite (which still exists to this day, though mainly used by Lawyers nowadays). As these old versions of WP are long abandoned, they're now available for free as abandonware for anyone to use.

The versions of Grammatik we'll be focusing on are the ones included with Wordperfect 6.2 for DOS, and Wordperfect 8 for Linux.

First we'll cover the Linux version from 1998, then the DOS version from 1996.

WordPerfect 8 for Linux

Example of using WP8 in the terminal as a Word Processor.

WP8 for Linux was exclusively a Terminal program, and fortunately for us, a lovely chap by the name of Tavis Ormandy packaged it up for various modern linux distros, making it trivial to install and run from the terminal. You can find the github repo for it down below.

This is by far the easiest way to get access to Grammatik (if you're on Linux), and will likely serve the needs of most people with the least amount of fuss. However, the older DOS version is actually a little more full-featured.

If you're on OSX or Windows, you'll need to use the DOS version.

Wordperfect 6.2 for DOS

Example of DOS Grammatik in actual use.

~~Included in the this older version of Grammatik was the ability to provide an example document to act as a writing style guide, which is a feature I haven't seen replicated in any other other program. In comparison, WP8's Grammatik only lets you select from a list of writing style presets (fiction, documentation, business letter, etc)~~ EDIT: after further testing, this is actually not true. You can only set an example document to compare your writing and the example's writing on a Flesch-Kincaid Readability score, which isn't nearly as useful compared to what I thought it did. However, the DOS version remains a bit more full featured, as it gives more detailed advice compared to newer versions of Grammatik.

WP6.2 is also freely available as abandonware, but since it's for DOS, you'll need to do a few extra steps to get it working, like using a DOS emulator (learning some basic DOS commands would also be helpful).

Here's what you'll need to get it running:

A DOS Emulator:

  • Linux: DOSemu2 will be the easiest way to run WP6.2 on Linux, with complete and seamless integration. However it only supports Ubuntu, Fedora, and openSUSE. If you're on Debian or Arch, you may want to use DOSBox-X or DOSBox Staging.

  • Windows & Mac: DOSBox-X or DOSBox Staging are the best options for non-Linux platforms. If you'd prefer, there are DOSBox GUI's that can negate the need to know DOS commands, such as DBGL, though I haven't tried these personally.

For a more complete guide, I'd recommend taking a look at Edward Mendelson's website, which features incredibly thorough instructions on getting WP6.2 perfectly integrated into modern OS's. Though bear in mind he wants to actually use it as a word processor, printer support and all. (Off topic, but Mendelson is a pretty cool dude. Used to write for PC Magazine back in the 80's and 90's, and is a college professor who gave a great talk about us moving toward a Surveillance Society

We can safely ignore the more in-depth stuff, since we just want to use Grammatik, so you don't need to bother going any further than getting the program itself up and running.


Conclusions

With no good open-source options, I like to think going back to using an old feature complete piece of software, made before user analytics or subscriptions were even a twinkle in an executive's eye, is actually kinda solarpunk.

It rejects the endless churn of modern software constantly trying to reinvent the wheel just to trick you out of more money which, in realty, just gets you an inferior tool, despite the fact that the old tool is nearly 30 years old. It also avoids contributing to climate change by avoiding the use of an AI in some datacenter needlessly wasting electricity and water to do something an ancient 8088 could've done in your home.

Grammatik likely isn't perfect; you'll still get some false positives, and you still need an eye for editing to be able to make executive decisions, but it's pretty darn good at what it does.

Hopefully one day it can be properly replaced with a modern open-source implementation that really does provide an advancement over the old. But as of right now, it's a solid tool to have in your belt as a writer, and certainly worth giving a try.

 

The first of hopefully many hundreds of (weekly) posts to come.

This is the first episode of the classic 80's computer PBS program, which delved into what was at the time the state of the art. A time when computer companies and hackers were still figuring out what these things could do, and when many whacky and interesting ideas were attempted, to varying success.

Join us as we relive computing history, one week at a time.

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