ProdigalFrog

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 4 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)
[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

I'd noticed your comments advertising that site in past, but since you regularly engaged with lemmy outside of advertising your battery deals site, I didn't feel the need to step in. But astroturfing your site as though you're a random activist who 'just so happened to be looking at this cool site that's totally not mine™' is a step too far, treading into scummy territory.

I don't want to see any more links to gearscouts on slrpnk.net communities from this point forward. And if you decide to continue to advertise on other instances; for gods sake man, just own that it's yours.

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 3 points 1 week ago (4 children)

The pilot is flying a self-propelled glider that uses an electric motor to get airborne, seen at 1 minute into the video.

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 7 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

A lot of Linux distros don't make money, I don't think that's a huge factor. A lack of interest so far is more likely (though I do recall there was a distro that was trying to be a 1 to 1 chromeOS replacement.

I just wanted to point out that us techies take a lot of our knowledge for granted, and it can be easy to lose perspective on what its like for tech illiterates.

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

It is an odd thing to disqualify it as well, since the Ostree stuff is not used by normal users on those distros, and at least on uBlue distros, they are even replacing the DE store witg their own that only offers flatland, essentially making it as simple as android to use.

There are still some kinks to work out to make it a true replacement to ChromeOS (if there's still a single app on the store that needs flatseal to get working or fix some visual glitch, or allow to view a certain directory, then it wouldn't be as smooth as ChromeOS), but it's getting pretty close to what the author wants.

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 10 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (3 children)

The author is suggesting that a distro that's extremely locked down, reliable, and with very limited user choice would be desirable traits for mass adoption by non-tech enthusiasts.

There'd no reason that a community built version of that vision would have to include data harvesting as well.

I use Debian as well, but there's an incredible amount of previous knowledge required to understand what its doing and how to set it up that experienced users take for granted. An innate curiosity and lack of fear of breaking things can make learning all that knowledge seem trivial to us, but to someone without those traits, it's an impassable obstacle.

A mostly tech illiterate person being plopped in front of a Debian install would have to learn on the spot:

Huh, what's this root password thing for?

Partitioning? What's that mean? I guess I'll select guided.

XFCE, KDE, cinnamon, gnome? What are those? Guess I'll check them all.

Okay I'm logged in, ooh this is neat. How do I install something? Ah, a store! (Only if they happened to log into gnome or KDE), this app looks cool, let's install that. Huh? I'm not in the sudoers file? What's that? I just want to install an app! Ugh, this is way too nerdy for me. I'm done.

Oh no, my Windows is gone!


If we assume that they had figured out how to install software and continue to use it, there would be nothing to inform them their firewall is off, nor that they would need to install GUFW to configure it with a GUI.

All of that is trivial for us. We know much of the basic concepts already, know what sort of questions to ask and where to find trustworthy information, and don't mind learning new things.

But for the tech illiterate, what we're doing may as well be magic. A locked down, dumbed down experience is what they would feel comfortable with.

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 5 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (4 children)

The immutable distros are very chromeOS-like. Bluefin GTS from UBlue in particular would probably fit the bill if it wasn't developer oriented.

Ah, I see they mentioned that in the article.

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 3 points 1 week ago

Dexed is a great free FM synthesis with tons of great presets.

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

Superb stuff! The dithered shading on the robot really makes it pop with dimension!

(Or is it an observatory? The black hole at the base could be an entrance, but I was second guessing myself since the scale of the grass would make it very small. Perhaps an entrance for an advanced species of intelligent lemmings who learned not to dive off cliffs? 😄)

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 3 points 2 weeks ago

No worries! Slrpnk.net was down until a few hours ago, perhaps that broke the alt-text from showing up? Last time it went down, I noticed a banner and community icon I had uploaded from slrpnk to a community on a different instance broke. I was surprised to learn that it had been pulling those images from my instance the entire time instead of it being stored on the outside instance, so maybe the same thing happens with alt-text?

[–] ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net 17 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Currently a general strike in the US is planned for May 1st 2028 to coincide with the UAW's contract ending. Unfortunately that's 3 years away, and I doubt climate policy is going to be a focus of that strike.

Hopefully we can organize one sooner, but we'll see. Syndicalist unions independent of corporate control would be the most likely to initiate a general strike, so I'd recommend joining up and unionizing your job with them if you can.

I also hope the rest of the world pushes for their own general strikes.

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

It should already have a quite detailed alt text. Does it not display when the image is hovered over with the mouse?

 

cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/24783048

I put together a quick flyer for us to print out for tomorrow's Good Trouble Again protest. (Find events near you on the map at their website!)

It was made in Krita (Scribus probably would've been better, but I didn't have time to learn it), using graphics from old IWW pamphlets.

It recommends:

  • Collective action and Unionizing with the IWW
  • What a General Strike is
  • Building community with a link to the Food Not Bombs website (probably the weakest section)
  • A section on Solarpunk with text from the manifesto, along with a link to slrpnk.net!
  • Ends with imploring readers to talk to the people around them at the protest and form connections.

The flyer is 2 pages designed to fit on a standard US Letter in landscape orientation to enable 2 flyers per page, and intended to be printed double-sided in long-edge mode.

You can create a PDF of the 2 pages for easier printing in Libreoffice Draw (go to Page > Page Properties > Enable Landscape Orientation, and reduce margins to 0.25")

Page 1 Double Flyer:

Page 2 Double Flyer:

If the double flyers aren't working out for you, I also have a single page version. (without the section imploring reader to talk to the people around them)

Page 1 Single Page:

https://slrpnk.net/pictrs/image/48eb821d-c3c7-481f-8cbb-029989fb18c8.png

Page 2 Single Page:

 

I put together a quick flyer for us to print out for tomorrow's Good Trouble Again protest. (Find events near you on the map at their website!)

It was made in Krita (Scribus probably would've been better, but I didn't have time to learn it), using graphics from old IWW pamphlets.

It recommends:

  • Collective action and Unionizing with the IWW
  • What a General Strike is
  • Building community with a link to the Food Not Bombs website (probably the weakest section)
  • A section on Solarpunk with text from the manifesto, along with a link to slrpnk.net!
  • Ends with imploring readers to talk to the people around them at the protest and form connections.

The flyer is 2 pages designed to fit on a standard US Letter in landscape orientation to enable 2 flyers per page, and intended to be printed double-sided in long-edge mode.

You can create a PDF of the 2 pages for easier printing in Libreoffice Draw (go to Page > Page Properties > Enable Landscape Orientation, and reduce margins to 0.25")

Page 1 Double Flyer:

Page 2 Double Flyer:

If the double flyers aren't working out for you, I also have a single page version. (without the section imploring reader to talk to the people around them)

Page 1 Single Page:

https://slrpnk.net/pictrs/image/48eb821d-c3c7-481f-8cbb-029989fb18c8.png

Page 2 Single Page:

 

I read a few posts from a few years ago that they suffered from some sort of ring crash bug frequently.

If you're currently on either of those cards, how is the stability nowadays? Any hiccups or problems, or is it 100% in gaming now?

Bonus question, does the Mesa driver allow you to access the VCN video encoder on the gpu?

EDIT: Thanks for all your responses, everyone! The consensus clearly shows they're pretty balin', and definitely worthy of switching away from Nvidia to. :D

 

This is a super interesting project, and the video is really well presented and explained, if you prefer that format.

I think this method could be brought even further by using 'thin clients' (a cheap laptop or used office mini-PC), making it possible to access the main gaming rig from any room in the house as long as you have access to a good network speed.

Utilizing a 'dummy' HDMI or Displayport stick, which simulates a monitor for the GPU, you could then remote into the gaming rig from a thin client-like PC through Moonlight/Sunlight, allowing you to use it as a fully fledged gaming or workstation PC.

If anyone decides to go that route, be aware that AMD GPU's have pretty notoriously bad encoders, so I'd recommend sticking with Nvidia (Pascal/1000 series or newer) or Intel GPU's/Integrated Graphics (6th generation 6000 series or newer) for the Host machine. It's a little less important for the client, I think.

EDIT: AMD did actually improve their encoders in recent years, starting with the Raven Ridge integrated graphics APUs, and the first generation Navi cards (RX 5700 onward, the lower end cards don't have it).

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