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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/)L
Posts
5
Comments
578
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I love Lemmy.

    I was wondering whether I was going to have to explain that rule to a crowd of angry zealots, furious that I could possibly oppose the Great and Mighty Apple like that.

    I'm not opposed to having macs in my collection (though as it so happens right now I don't have any), because it's not about hating Apple and entirely about whether I can do something useful with the hardware.

    A majority of the ARM hardware I have is old Android phones booting a pretty standard Linux distro with custom kernels. Most of them have drivers missing for various pieces of hardware, but as long as they can boot, connect to my homelab network over USB and run containers, they make excellent build/test devices.

  • Yeah this is basically what I do. People like giving me their stuff because I'm transparent about the deal:

    1. If at all possible, I will wipe it for you.
    2. If it's usable, I will either add it to my TrashCloud™ or (especially for laptops) set it up for a kid.
    3. Parts/devices that I cannot get working I will take to electronics recycling.
    4. No iPhones/iPads.

  • no

  • Gotta get some use out of that giant spacebar that's sitting at the bottom of your keyboard!

  • I own one pair of jeans and on the rare occasion that I'm wearing them I'm not going to have anything in my pockets.

  • It's in the name.

  • I have Linux running on a machine with 256 MB of RAM and a single core 700 MHz ARM11 CPU.

    I also have it running on a machine with 128 multi-gigahertz cores and a terabyte of RAM. That flexibility is part of why I use Linux.

  • IIRC Gentoo was designed to be a successor to Slackware.

  • I very intentionally have all my code in Personal Projects 🥰 and Work Projects 🏦 directories so I can find bugs in the handling of file paths.

  • Webp

    Jump
  • Google were literally one of the three organisations who worked on the standard, and the top contributor to the reference implementation works there.

  • As far as I understand, Tailscale (being a Wireguard network) doesn't need you to flip it off and on - if you're connecting to the relevant endpoint it gets routed through that, otherwise it just goes the normal way.

    Not gonna pretend that means the setup is trivial to nomies, but you could probably set it up for them and not have to worry about it.

  • I start sending fediverse links containing memes etc. and eventually they sign up on one of the sites.

  • Meanwhile I'm here skipping lunch because I have no sense of time when I'm solving an interesting problem.

  • Snap and KDE. Best of both worlds IMO.

  • Kubuntu.

  • Next you'll be telling people their AI waifus aren't real!

  • Most sources are worse than Wikipedia.

  • It does not "just work" for me and I love it that way. I got bored of using Kubuntu LTS because nothing interesting happened. Now I'm running prerelease versions of everything and get to file (and fix!) bug reports on the reg.

  • QWERTY keyboard. 2/10