thejevans

joined 2 years ago
[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 16 points 10 months ago

The fact that there is overlap has no bearing on whether your definition is common.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 17 points 10 months ago (3 children)

That's nice. If your goal is to ever talk to people about open source software, that's going to create a lot of unnecessary confusion.

On top of that, accepting this bolsters companies to use this kind of a definition specifically to take advantage of the mental model that many people have connecting "open source" with OSI.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 23 points 10 months ago

Lol what a clusterfuck. These guys are dolts.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

As you have in your post, Logical Increments is a good place to start.

As others have said, AMD is your best bet currently, mostly because of raw performance compared to recent Intel offerings. If you have no limited budget or power requirements, here are my recommendations:

If you have the paid version of Davinci Resolve, AMD does not have the best selection of hardware encode/decode options, but people have reported that Intel Arc GPUs work, so I would get and Intel A310 as a secondary GPU if that is something that you need.

If you want the best of the best GPU, without going Nvidia, the AMD RX 7900XTX is it. Also, AMD has stated publicly that they are moving away from high-end GPUs, so there probably won't be a better one coming out anytime soon.

If you want to plan for more gaming than you stated in your post, the Ryzen 7800X3D is the best gaming CPU on the market, so I would get that. If you plan to focus on video editing, the 9950X is the best, but probably not worth the cost compared to cheaper 9000 or 7000 chips.

If you go with a Ryzen 7000 or 9000 CPU, get DDR5-6000 CL30 memory.

If you're getting an air cooler for your CPU, don't pay more than $50. There are a ton of great, cheap options these days.

Get either the new Antec Flux Pro case (when it's available, probably this month) or the Fractal Torrent if you care about best thermals and quiet operation. Everything else is a compromise.

If you need HDMI 2.1, you'll need a DP -> HDMI adapter on an AMD GPU because of a licensing squabble.

Those are things I could think of off the top of my head. I don't think I missed anything big.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 10 points 10 months ago

If you're on a budget and can get 12th gen parts for cheap, I guess

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 12 points 10 months ago

I played through it yesterday. It was interesting, and there were fun story beats, but it was very easy. With all the accessibility features and tutorials, it's probably a great game to get people who don't play games interested in platforming games and maybe even some RPGs.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 2 points 10 months ago

I agree that once directionally-drilled wells are completed and start producing, they have a short life where they are producing a serious profit. The issue is that companies will get permits that don't expire for drilling a bunch of wells, then they drill some (but not all), and often won't complete all the wells immediately, as they wait for the market prices of oil and gas to be in their favor. This can drag on for a decade or more.

Once these wells aren't as profitable, they still produce oil and gas for a long time, and there are emissions associated with that.

Also, while emissions do correlate with production overall, emissions are a much higher proportion of production as wells go beyond their peak, and they often get sold to companies that don't do as good of a job maintaining them, which leads to more emissions, etc.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 4 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Even if we stopped giving out drilling permits and closed all marginal wells tomorrow, emissions would continue to increase. There are lots of oil and gas facilities that have permitted wells that they haven't drilled yet, and newer facilities that will probably emit more as they age.

Actively reducing emissions in aggregate over the whole country, not just reducing the rate of increase in emissions will either require a lot of time or decisive action from Washington to force states to cancel permits and ban drilling, which is pretty clearly not going to happen without a massive shift in political leanings in the House, Senate, Presidency, and the courts.

It fucking sucks, but without massive political pressure I don't expect much on the federal level anytime soon.

In the meantime, vote for state candidates this cycle that say they will do the most, and pressure them to do the most they possibly can and don't ever let up.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 5 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)

It does for me. And it has for over a year. I have to reset the cache every day or it slows to an unusable crawl. The web client works fine, though

Edit: github issue: https://github.com/element-hq/element-android/issues/6617

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 3 points 10 months ago (3 children)

Schildichat is the only client I can use on my phone that implements both spaces and threads and doesn't have a memory leak.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 4 points 10 months ago

When I was working in IT, this would have been a very useful tool for doing some on-site troubleshooting with various tools or for one-off reimaging machines that were missed during a big update or something. Instead, I had a bag of USB sticks with labels on them, which was annoying to use and to maintain.

[–] thejevans@lemmy.ml 2 points 10 months ago

It won't have the same performance as a PS5, but the new Minisforum MS-A1 with a user-upgradable CPU is a really interesting proposition. The Ryzen 8700G is pretty good, but I would expect solid upgrades to be available in the next few CPU generations.

I currently have an Nvidia Shield Pro (2019), and it's fine. I have Moonlight installed and can stream from my desktop PC using Sunshine (I do this on my Steam Deck, too), but I don't expect that Nvidia will make a replacement, and I don't know if I would get it if they did.

The software outside of Steam's big picture mode isn't ready for a full Linux couch experience, but it's close. The two projects to watch are KDE Plasma Bigscreen and Waydroid (some people are starting to get Android TV working) which would be a nice bridge to use apps designed for a TV UI until native Linux versions become available.

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