fastfinge

joined 2 years ago
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[–] fastfinge@rblind.com 4 points 8 months ago

Works well. I host this myself to check up on my data center and how it’s doing routing traffic to consumer isps in the real world.

[–] fastfinge@rblind.com 12 points 8 months ago

There's also a list here, though last updated in 2020: https://distributedcomputing.info/projects.html

Most of those projects remain active in some form.

[–] fastfinge@rblind.com 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

For those of us using screen readers, this is a way bigger deal. Honestly I probably shouldn't use a bluetooth headset and a bluetooth keyboard for my banking. We focus so much on SSL/HTTPS and wifi security, but I wonder how much effort goes into wireless keyboard security? Not nearly as much, I'd bet.

[–] fastfinge@rblind.com 1 points 1 year ago

Problem was that I usually only discovered the issue when I went to read the book lol

[–] fastfinge@rblind.com 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I never did that, my connection was too slow to want to take up someone's DCC slot for like a day to get an entire movie. Remember all the frustrating idiots who would share .lit files, but forget to remove the DRM from them?

[–] fastfinge@rblind.com 14 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Ah, good to know. Back in my day, when we had to walk a hundred miles to school in the snow, up hill both ways, IRC was the only place to get ebooks. I'm guessing it's just the old users clinging on now.

[–] fastfinge@rblind.com 22 points 1 year ago (7 children)

Man, I’m getting flashbacks to my days running omenserve on undernet. I had no idea people were still doing this! How does the content compare to places like Anna’s archive these days?

 

This looks like the replacement for BGT. For those of you who haven't heard of BGT, it was a game engine for creating audiogames that was developed throughout the early 2010's. It's possible to migrate old BGT games to NVGT with just a little bit of work. Here's hoping that NVGT brings on a new golden age of cross-platform audiogames.

[–] fastfinge@rblind.com 2 points 1 year ago

Prophecy approved companion is excellent! It gave me all the feels. It’s both extremely funny, and extremely poignant as the main character learns who she is, what’s really going on, and her intended roll in it all. It’s one of the few series where the reader knows exactly what’s happening from the start, but the fact the main character being slow to catch on isn’t frustrating.

[–] fastfinge@rblind.com 1 points 1 year ago

Also, if you don't feel comfortable building bookworm from source yourself, and you feel like you can trust me, Here's a build of the latest bookworm code from github for 64-bit Windows: https://www.sendspace.com/pro/dl/rd388d

[–] fastfinge@rblind.com 1 points 1 year ago

If you use Bookworm and use the built-in support for espeak, you can get up to 600 words per minute or so. Dectalk can go well over 900 words per minute. As far as I know, cocoa tops out at around 500 words per minute. So all of the options accept piper should be fine for you.

[–] fastfinge@rblind.com 1 points 1 year ago

No, Mistral 7B can't describe or work with images. Thanks for answering!

[–] fastfinge@rblind.com 15 points 1 year ago (3 children)

It really depends on your use case. If you want something that sounds pretty okay, and is decently fast, Piper fits the bill. However, this is just a command line TTS system; you'll need to build all the supporting infrastructure if you want it to read audiobooks. https://github.com/rhasspy/piper

An extension for the free and open source NVDA screen reader to use piper lives here: https://github.com/mush42/piper-nvda

If you want something that can run in realtime, though sounds somewhat robotic, you want dectalk. This repo comes with libraries and dlls, as well as several sample applications. Note, however, that the licensing status of this code is...uh...dubious to say the least. Dectalk was abandonware for years, and the developer leaked the sourcecode on a mailing list in the 2000's. However, ownership of the code was recently re-established, and Dectalk is now a commercial product once again. But the new owners haven't come after the repo yet: https://github.com/dectalk/dectalk

If you want a robotic but realtime voice that's fully FOSS with known licensing status, you want espeak-ng: https://github.com/espeak-ng/espeak-ng

If you want a fully fledged software application to read things to you, but don't need a screen reader and don't want to build scripts yourself, you want bookworm: https://github.com/blindpandas/bookworm

Note, however, that you should build bookworm from source. While the author accepts pull requests, because of his circumstances, he's no longer able to build new releases: https://github.com/blindpandas/bookworm/discussions/224

If you are okay with using closed-source freeware, Balabolka is another way to go to get a full text to speech reader: https://www.cross-plus-a.com/balabolka.htm

 

As far as I can tell, my instance is nowhere near max database connections. However, after about two hours, I always get errors like "WARN Error encountered while processing the incoming HTTP request: lemmy_server::root_span_builder: Timeout occurred while waiting for a slot to become available" if we're under any load at all. Does anyone know what's going on here? This doesn't seem to be a resource use issue. It happens with the default docker configuration as shown in the docs. It happens if I spin up a test instance and generate a bunch of load, so it seems perfectly replicable.

Edit: The solution for me was building the docker images myself. Didn't matter if I used the official releases from dockerhub, the development images, whatever. It still crashed with this error eventually. I've been up with the images I built myself for eight or so hours, and we seem fine.

2
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by fastfinge@rblind.com to c/mylittlepony@lemmy.world
 

So as an FYI, if you're also leaving Twitter, there's a healthy, active, and well moderated (if I do say so myself) pony Mastodon over at equestria.social. There's also pony.social, run by equally good folks. I don't think we have a peertube or Pixelfed yet though. Does anyone know of one I'm missing?

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