enchantedgoldapple

joined 1 month ago
[–] enchantedgoldapple@sopuli.xyz 30 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Wow, a Hades AND a Disco Elysium reference!

[–] enchantedgoldapple@sopuli.xyz 2 points 3 days ago (1 children)

The coloured lines remind me of the rigging features of 2d animation softwares. Good sketch btw

I recall reading about a murder case where the blood of the killer was preserved back when DNA sampling technology was nonexistent and the court knew the identity of the killer but couldn't prove it. A decade later the same blood sample was tested when DNA fingerprint became viable and matched with the killer, proving him guilty.

I can understand your reasoning now. Knowing some trace of my DNA could be preserved for years or decades just to profile me on a molecular level seems sufficiently dystopian. Thanks for letting me know

[–] enchantedgoldapple@sopuli.xyz 0 points 4 days ago (2 children)

Could you tell me more on why having the DNA of a person is a "privacy endgame"? I don't have much knowledge on DNA sampling and applications like in 23andMe, but isn't it ultimately used for identification? Government IDs like SSN seem to already hold all information about you and your relation with others. Besides if they are so keen on collecting your DNA, they could just collect it without your knowledge from the places you stay or work at or anywhere in between.

[–] enchantedgoldapple@sopuli.xyz 1 points 4 days ago (3 children)

I just shifted my entire workspace from brave to waterfox a few weeks ago! Now I have to do it again...

I know Librewolf exists, but I have reserved it for only personal and private use. I also know I could use containers too but my work use requires websites where I need the canvas API and DRM, and I don't want to unharden my Librewolf installation for them which is why I want to store my 'work' workspace in a separate browser altogether. Is there some other Firefox fork I could use for desktop?

[–] enchantedgoldapple@sopuli.xyz 18 points 4 days ago (3 children)

Just like Zeus and Odysseus!

 

There are a few Docker projects I haven't been able to properly implement in my homelab, only because their images need to be user-compiled and Dockge doesn't seem to have an option to include the entire repository required for the project compilation in its interface or in the stacks directory. I know I could just host them in a separate directory but I would like my services to be manageable from a single place and following this approach isolates the service from being controlled from Dockge.

Is there some workaround or a solution for this I am unaware of? I initially thought I could deploy Coolify within Dockge and store the applications under it but apparently Coolify is meant to work on its own and I fear running both Coolify and Dockge will break stuff.

[–] enchantedgoldapple@sopuli.xyz 4 points 1 week ago (4 children)

How do you actually play this game? I'm not into card games in general but this one seems oddly interesting

I think you misspelt 'terrific'

[–] enchantedgoldapple@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I unironically have a wallpaper just like that. I love taking screenshots of games I play and putting them on my desktop. Some of them tend to be rather bright, but they get covered by other windows most of the time so they aren't really a bother.

[–] enchantedgoldapple@sopuli.xyz 21 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I personally appreciate the fact that you took the time to select the proper font for the text edit to overwrite the self censor. It stayed so true to the original craft that I hardly noticed the change.

 

Reading earlier comments in this community made me consider documenting the workings of my homelab to some extent, ie. docker configuration, credentials, ports and links of my services. I've tried to make it consistent and organised but it still feels half baked and insufficient. Everyone suggests documenting everything you do in your homelab but don't state how. Since I've hardly had experience running my own server, I would really appreciate observing the blueprint of some other fellow selfhoster for copying or taking inspiration from rather than considering documentation to be 'left as an exercise for the reader'.

Edit: I already have a note-taking solution with me. What I wish to ask is to know what needs to be documented and what the structure of the documentation should be to accommodate the information.

 

I've been following MoistCr1TiKaL for over a year, just because of his weird and creative sense of humour (not his monotonous speech) that he uses when talking about a subject or commentating on videos or games. I don't have much interest in the topic of his videos themselves but I occasionally click on some to get a few laughs just from the way he talks about them.

There's no other channel I've found that does shitposty commentary like him, or at least ones that post as regularly. Louis Rossman's rants do also entertain me to an extent, but he mostly focuses on select few issues on his channel that don't resonate with me as much. Internet Comment Etiquette with Erik is another quality channel but has a lower posting frequency.

Could you recommend me creators similar to him, preferably who can make actually decent jokes and post often? Podcasters are welcome too.

 

I want to let people know why I'm strictly against using AI in everything I do without sounding like an 'AI vegan', especially in front of those who are genuinely ready to listen and follow the same.

Any sources I try to find to cite regarding my viewpoint are either mild enough to be considered AI generated themselves or filled with extremist views of the author. I want to explain the situation in an objective manner that is simple to understand and also alarming enough for them to take action.

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