Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)T
Posts
1
Comments
45
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • It’s not illegal in the US either, but you can still be sued by employers for doing it.

  • What?

    My great grandfather’s grave is still around and he died in the ‘80s, in a cemetery in a highly populated part of my city. Right next to him is his son that was killed in Vietnam in the ‘60s.

    Depends on region of course, but I think most graves are around for much longer than 6 years.

  • This is such a poor attempt at trolling. Don’t you have better things to do?

  • It is simpler when you’re doing stuff on the web and/or need to scale.

  • Compared to MinIO, it has more storage backend flexibility, cross-region replication is easy, it is resilient to less-than-ideal network conditions between nodes. Did you bother reading the website?

    I’m not sure why your immediate reaction to having more options is negative.

  • Update the drivers on windows and see if the latest version supports it

    Or

    Install WSL or a VM and pass the device through to linux, let the kernel find it and activate the drivers, configure the network, then set up routes to share that connection with the host.

  • Set up a cheap VPS on DigitalOcean or the like, and run a Tailscale exit node. Put Tailscale on your devices at home (or get a 2nd router that allows you to run Tailscale on it) and join them to the same Tailnet. That’s the easiest way to accomplish this without getting too far into the weeds.

  • You could have definitely gotten a longer interface name for that one example. enp0s31f6mon might be a good one lol

  • I truly do think this is a cool feature, but after seeing all the comments saying stuff like “now there’s ZERO excuse not to use Wayland!”, I felt like it was appropriate to share my perspective as a professional user who uses their computer a little differently than a FOSS enthusiast or hobbyist/casual user. I’m not getting paid to go around submitting bug reports and making PRs, so when things don’t “just work” it can be a big issue.

  • I’m talking about FOSS software incompatibilities, I don’t have any expectation for mega corporate apps like Discord and Teams to adopt it. Those are a lost cause, I just use the browser versions and pray.

    I truly do think this is a cool feature, but after seeing all the comments saying stuff like “now there’s ZERO excuse not to use Wayland!”, I felt like it was appropriate to share my perspective as a professional user who uses their computer a little differently than a FOSS enthusiast or hobbyist/casual user. I’m not getting paid to go around submitting bug reports and making PRs, so when things don’t “just work” it can be a big issue.

  • This is cool, but half the software I need to use still doesn’t work on Wayland for some inexplicable reason.

    I know this is the responsibility of the software maintainer to fix their compatibility, but as a business user I don’t have time to go around filing detailed bug reports and waiting for the next release when it’s fixed.

    The solution for me is to switch back to X11 and move along, then in another year I try Wayland again after installing a new distro. After a few hours I find something that isn’t working on Wayland, rinse and repeat.

  • If you’re running Windows I would suggest looking into ShareX. It’s a million times better imo. Support for custom uploaders, video and gif recording, etc. It’s also free and open source.

  • rule

    Jump
  • And it’s impossible for server owners to turn it off, even in “private” servers your conversations are constantly being fed into an AI.

  • The prompt on the desktop that says there and pending updates that can only be installed with Pro.

  • Ah shit you’re right, I didn’t look too closely at it. I saw the Lego brick shape and my mind went to Glock

  • That’s just a sand colored SIG, very real gun.

    Edit: Accidentally thought it was a Glock at first, my bad.

  • Do you mean “transcribe”, maybe?

  • Surely a company like Microsoft or Sega has enough weight to throw around to get a contract obligating the GPU provider to continue providing GPUs for X amount of years after the console’s launch, right? Maybe that was an oversight on the original Xbox, but I don’t see why they couldn’t do that now.

  • Never had any major issues in my past decade of using iOS. Minor bugs here and there, sure, but it mostly just works.