hangonasecond

joined 2 years ago
[–] hangonasecond@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I don't know anything about your overall claim and don't know what the movie is that you're talking about but CGI absolutely did exist in 1986. The original Tron released 4 years prior, and green screens/similar had been around for decades.

[–] hangonasecond@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

They mention they're only doing things locally, and looking into using tailscale, so they aren't exposing to public web and the security concerns you mention are a lot less important.

[–] hangonasecond@lemmy.world 9 points 2 months ago

Windows 10 long term servicing channel. It's intended for things like electronic signs but works great if you just want un bloated windows. It comes with most of the random bullshit not installed and has a longer period of security updates.

[–] hangonasecond@lemmy.world 4 points 2 months ago

People 'know' how to use Microsoft products. I'm a data guy and might spend less than a day a week in word, PowerPoint, excel. Most of the time I spend in them is checking other people's work. I'm still called on to help people with such tasks as switching from footnotes to endnotes, moving files in SharePoint, fixing formatting. My general knowledge of navigating the UI and googling fixes is better than what people 'know'.

[–] hangonasecond@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago

Yeah you're correct. The person you're replying to is treating dictionary attacks as separate from brute forcing. Dictionary attacks are great on short passwords using likely words, but as soon as you use 2 or 3 or 4 words it becomes computationally unfeasible. I would say a completely random string of the same or much less length is more secure because a dictionary attack won't work at all, but 3-4 word passphrases are excellent for passwords that you have to manually enter ever.

[–] hangonasecond@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago

I definitely have a different experience to other people here, so it's not all bad. A lot of managers and employers are cottoning onto the fact that some aspects of neurodiversity are a strength in the workplace, and being supported through the challenges means you'll have an easier time accessing those strengths.

[–] hangonasecond@lemmy.world 3 points 2 months ago

It's massive because of context. Massive is inherently a comparative term. Something can't be large or significant unless something else is small. Here the context is performance gains (in comparison to other forms of PC gaming) constrained by 1) being on exactly the same hardware 2) a sizeable price difference between the two options.

Here the performance gains are 10+% for a device which costs more than 10% less. The size of the performance gains in the handheld market would otherwise need you to buy a new handheld, and those fps increases would demand spending at least a few hundred bucks on a new GPU.

So massive performance gains with the implied context is absolutely true.

[–] hangonasecond@lemmy.world 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I think they're saying they've already signed into a Google account, downloaded play store apps, and set everything up. Afterwards, they have disconnected the Chromecast from the internet and successfully continued to access their self hosted content.

[–] hangonasecond@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago

Oh! Appreciate the tip. I'll investigate this weekend

[–] hangonasecond@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago

No worries! I've used the calibre app for ebooks in the past and it does quite well.

[–] hangonasecond@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago (4 children)

I use the Audiobookshelf app from AdvPlyr on the play store. I've been meaning to try Lissen since it's on F-Droid, but I tried this to make sure my partner didn't have any issues.

If I'm using it on my PC I just connect to the web UI.

I connect on all my devices with tailscale. My partner uses the same but has apparently been having issues with her phone not being able to access the tailnet when not on the same LAN. It's not so bad though, the Audiobookshelf app lets her download her books. This works better anyway, since she travels for work and often has no service anyway.

[–] hangonasecond@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago (6 children)

I use abs and it's great. My partner listens to audiobooks, I read ebooks. You just have them side by side in the library, and in the audiobookshelf android app you can choose between stream or read. You also don't need to store them side by side, the metadata can put them together clientside anyway. I guess this would be the way to go if you thought you might try a diff ebook hosting service later.

If all you do with your ebooks is read them, I daresay you'll have no issues because I haven't. Supports volume controls for page turn and that's all that I want.

 

This is poetry. I believe in us

 

Pretty useless article that says basically what we already know, but some interesting tidbits from other clubs. Here's the Arsenal bit:

Recent years show Arsenal are not afraid of doing business in January and they will be alert again — depending on usual considerations such as injuries, profitability and sustainability rules (PSR) and opportunities in the window.

Last summer’s spending meant the signing of David Raya from Brentford needed to be done on loan with an option to buy (£27million; $34.2m), which shows Arsenal were in a tight spot around PSR. Once adequate finances are available, the Raya deal must be turned permanent.

Let’s see whether those finances are generated from existing resources or require player trading. Should it be the former, departures could presumably be used to enhance the budget. Should it be the latter, there is unlikely to be a huge amount of money at manager Mikel Arteta’s disposal.

The most obvious candidate to exit might be Aaron Ramsdale. Any goalkeeper in his position will want to regular football, especially given the desire to get into England’s Euro 2024 squad, though there have been no significant movements yet — nor are any certain to materialise.

While plenty of speculation has focused on Arsenal potentially recruiting a striker, that is more plausible in the summer. Nothing has developed regarding Ivan Toney and it would take a massive bid to change that, particularly with Bryan Mbeumo out for around three months with an ankle injury.

Even if Victor Osimhen, Benjamin Sesko and Evan Ferguson are among those admired by Arsenal (and many other clubs), it is not anticipated they will land at the Emirates Stadium soon.

Activity in midfield probably relies on somebody leaving or the fitness situation deteriorating. For both reasons, we should keep an eye on Thomas Partey and Jorginho — but it is more realistic to imagine their futures being decided after the campaign has ended.

Arsenal explored the idea of Martin Zubimendi of Real Sociedad 12 months ago and interest remains strong. However, multiple factors would have to combine to make it happen. Despite his contract including a release clause, the Spaniard would have to agree to go; that has been a stumbling block in the past and may prove a bigger problem given Real Sociedad are in the Champions League round of 16.

Cover at the back offers another dilemma. The absences of Jurrien Timber and Takehiro Tomiyasu at full-back — where Partey has also featured — arguably makes defence the area worthiest of strengthening but when everyone is fit, Arsenal are well stocked. So no guarantees but it would not be a total shock if there was a reinforcement here, perhaps on a short-term basis.

 

I might be jumping the gun but I think lemmy.world was having issues when the daily thread would usually go up, so I'm posting in it's absence. Apologies in advance if I'm too quick but my poor memory tells me it's about 2 hours late now.

 

No time today to play around too long so I still need to work on filtering out names, and trying to adjust the shape isn't working properly.

I think this picture sends a really clear message though.

 

I still have a ways to go eliminating pointless words, but sensiblepuffin and Astrealix were absolutely correct that Fuck and Fucking feature very prominently.

Raya is up there too, with Kai. Does that mean Havertz was as good as Raya was poor?

I think I will exclude anything I recognise as a username in the next one, and I also want to add weighting for how many upvotes the comment the word came from got. I also want to make it look nicer - this is the default for the package I was using.

I feel pretty good about this for a first pass. Let me know what you guys think I can change.

 
 

I've been thinking about this a fair bit recently, and hopefully it sparks some good discussion. We're a club with a long history, and a diverse fan base, and it's always interesting to see how people respond to questions like this:

Who are your favourite, and least favourite players? More specifically I'm interested in:

  1. Your favourite player in the current squad?

  2. Your favourite player ever?

  3. Your "what could have been" player - someone you were hopeful about when we signed them, but never quite lived up to the hype?

  4. Your least favourite? Maybe someone who seemed to make it in the lineup no matter what when you could see what everyone couldn't - they were shit.

 

you fuckers are all over my active feed and I'm laughing at shit I don't understand. I refuse to believe the show is this funny, but if, say, a friend wanted to prove me wrong, what incarnation of star trek would they tell me to start from? especially if they knew I hadn't seen a single episode.

 

Bukayo Saka takes out the PFA Young Player Of The Year! Gabriel Martinelli was also among the nominees. Safe to say Saka is a clear winner, given Haaland took Player of the Year.

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