moonpiedumplings

joined 2 years ago

schadnefreudne

This one is good, but I read right through it — although reading out loud would probably make this more difficult, it really depends on the streamers familiarity with the words. Possibly they might be tripped up, and possibly they would struggle.

This does give me an idea to use words which are hard to pronounce, like gif (which is actually pretty easy, just use the G in GiGantic). And then force them to pronounce them, or argue about pronunciation.

[–] moonpiedumplings@programming.dev 0 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

On linux, with kde, there is usually a browser extension preinstalled called plasma integration.

It makes it so that when you search from the KDE equivalent of window's start menu, you can also search open browser tabs or history.

I close all tabs once I'm done, but when trying to solve a programming/devops related problem, having lots of tabs open lets me see more than one approach to a problem, along with opinions, side by side.

And research in general requires a lot of tabs, in my experience.

Arch wiki translates pretty well, but I recommend comparing it with the opensuse wiki, because some stuff doesn't line up.

Personally, I encountered an issue with tumbleweed secure boot, where the tumbleweed implementation didn't work. Switched back to arch after that.

[–] moonpiedumplings@programming.dev 7 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

These requirements are really specific. Whites parts of black pictures in particular, I can't think of anything that implements that.

Anyway, these probably don't have everything you want, but I use Librera:

website: https://librera.mobi/

Github: https://github.com/foobnix/LibreraReader

No material you theme, but I know it has font selection, and dictionary/translation integration.

The website claims it supports custom themings, and CSS. I can find the options in my app, but I haven't touched them.

It also supports custom fonts, including user added ones.

It supports sync between librera instances (Google Drive has first class support), but not with Foliate.

It defaults to "book mode" which is page

I run languagetool locally, and it's actually really good, but the browser extension is closed source even though I can point it at a local server, I don't know if it's logging what I type.

But libreoffice has built in support, which is great.

Does your laptop have hybrid graphics? Based on the error it's possible that sunshine is running on the intel accidentally, rather than the nvidia.

You can force apps to run on the nvidia gpu with things like prime.

https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/PRIME#PRIME_render_offload

Works fine in firefox for me. And interestingly, the pwa features still work even though firefox doesn't have first class support for it, meaning you can even access this "website" fully offline after you visit it once.

[–] moonpiedumplings@programming.dev 5 points 2 years ago (1 children)

https://the-guild.dev/blog/judging-open-source-by-github-stars

On phone rn, but I'd love to see someone run the fake star checking project at projects like this.

Have you seen xcp-ng and xen orchestra?

Was watching a twitch streamer learning linux, and chat convinced them to open vim for the first time. Not a single person gave the real answer of how to exit, all joke answers like "Power off," and it was hilarious.

[–] moonpiedumplings@programming.dev 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

No I swear, I was gonna do more than that.

Maybe like, a static site as well. And a backup server. Y'know, things you need openstack for.

*looks away guiltily*

https://moonpiedumplings.github.io/projects/build-server-2/

You know what can also test destructive changes?

Cockpit's networkmanager interface.

It literally has no benefits, and is only a pain to use.

Actually, it does have one benefit: it integrates with Canonical's other tech. For example, MAAS uses ot for networking, and I bet lxc uses it somehow.

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