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stupid_asshole69 [none/use name]

@ stupid_asshole69 @hexbear.net

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0
Comments
257
Joined
9 mo. ago

  • Someone already told you to use a vm. They’re right, but if you insist on booting to actual bare metal windows instead, consider devoting a handful of gigabytes to a dual boot setup. It’s really easy to do and will be much more reliable than the way out of service windows to go.

    If you have a specific piece of software you need to run I may could help you figure out the vm setup for it. Windows VMs are my solution to running cad packages.

  • I have it set up the same as the default macos shortcuts for desktops.

    There’s two different configurations for keys, the window manager and lxqt itself. I’m using x instead of Wayland so my key config is split between xfwm the window manager and lxqt.

  • I have used multiple brands of audio interface with between one and over fifty mono inputs to record, loop and analyze signals in real time on windows, linux and macos. I have used amd, intel, nvidia and arm/apple gpus to play games on linux, windows and macOS.

    If you can tolerate the old man gaming experience of fiddling with some settings, maybe editing a text file or something then you’ll have a better time gaming on linux than on windows.

    If you understand what your daw is doing under the hood then you will do fine using linux for production. If you need to use a specific daw or you need to be able to use its plugins on an alternate platform without much effort you won’t have an easy time.

    Ubuntu studio is probably a bad choice. You’re likely better off starting from the ground up with a non-Ubuntu distribution. Especially if you have a paid copy of reaper then you’ll have no problem finding support for whatever you wanna do.

  • I used to use a small laptop like yours. Now the smallest one is a spacious 13” so it doesn’t feel quite so constrained.

    I ended up on lxqt with the bar on the left hand side and a bunch of virtual desktops. It can do everything you’re asking for and my use is keyboard first. Give it a shot, it’s good.

  • Wdym by this:

    Trouble is, one BD is very flimsy and data can be even flimsier.

    It’s not clear if you want to use bd as a backup to store data or as a way to bootleg physical media.

    I have done both and can help you but the former is generally a bad idea.

  • It doesn’t matter what people on the internet think or what you think, it matters what your partner thinks. When you only get to enjoy it by yourself are you talking about watching or listening to something? If so, and your partner is implacable about piracy, then just treat the cost of buying or renting media the cost of a date night. It’s most likely worth it to enjoy those things together.

    What does your partner dislike about piracy? There’s lots to be weirded out by, the internet culture exposure, often times the quality, the abnormalcy of the experience, the implication that you can’t afford to pay for media, just to name a few.

    Talk to your partner and try to accommodate their concerns instead of asking the internet how to weasel your way past them.

  • Yeah get in there and get your feet underneath you.

  • Go test into one of the music trackers. It’s easy if you can follow instructions and retain information. If you end up feeling like the social expectations of a private tracker are tripping you up then spend a little time on the mya tracker to get used to it first.

    If you’re making your own rips then being exposed to the information, toolsets and expectations of the private trackers will improve the quality of your output.

  • Do you have a git or something for this?

    Your system is better than mine and I wanna steal from it.

  • I been using torrents since they became a good option a little over twenty years ago. I’ve torrented using public and all manner of private trackers both with and without vpn or tor.

    I have received letters from various ISPs during those years. Here’s what it all boils down to:

    What’s most important: turn off peer exchange and dht, turn on require encryption.

    What’s also important: only use private trackers.

    What’s less important, but good to have: use a vpn with port forwarding with your client bound to its interface. It doesn’t matter if you don’t bind the client to the vpn interface so make sure you do that.

    E: just read through the comments on your native instance that don’t show up to me normally. There’s some old misinformation going around still. I’m not gonna argue or go into great detail but things like only leeching, only using foreign trackers or using someone else’s WiFi don’t do anything to help you avoid some kind of letter.

  • For under $200 you can either get a used thinkpad t series or a dell business notebook. You can also get an Intel mac for around that price. The difference in serviceability is often what can be done by you with a screwdriver set and guitar pick versus needing a hair dryer and plastic putty knife.

  • No.

    The hardware needed to host even just a full size gpt3 costs tens of thousands of dollars, requires high current or high voltage circuits not usually accessible in residential homes and will actually use multiple thousands of watts of power.

    If someone is giving access to such an expensive, power hungry industrial system for free they’re either doing it to learn from the inputs (not private) or don’t have a commercially viable system (not good).

  • I’m glad you got it set up how you were looking to! Wezterm is a new one for me.

  • I was able to test out what you’re looking for on macos and its default out of the box terminal does copy and pasting with command-c/x/v just like everywhere else in the os. I haven’t tested Unicode, but rich text and other marked up text types get copied with their formatting between editors that support it and as ansi characters when pasted into the terminal. Option (alt) arrow keys jump to the first letter of each “word” and control arrow keys don’t do what you want because at the os level they’re the keys for switching workspaces. Which is really nice and reminds me I need to set up my windows image to do this instead of uhh win-ctrl or whatever it is.

    The default macos shell is zsh, so maybe with that shift-select extension you can get it the way you like.

    Might be time to switch to a mac!

    I’m really surprised that you couldn’t get alacritty working in Ubuntu, it’s been working fine on Debian stable for at least two major versions when installed through apt.

  • lol I actually looked this up and the op is asking how to replace the developers own cashier facing logo on the pirated software package.

    ~datacaixa~ marvel’s really good pos

  • Point of sale software usually stores that stuff in its database. You don’t change it from the point of sale terminal, you change it from the computer in the back by making changes to the information in the database it pulls from.

  • Yeah when I call them the Macintosh keys that’s because I’m almost 100% that the 84 Macintosh was the first thing to use them. Not just the keys specifically, but that operating model we I guess later called wysiwyg. I think it was command instead of control, but it occupies the same place on the keyboard. It’s certainly the oldest thing I’ve used that had them. Windows used to do it like old dos word processors did, with insert and delete etc.

    It’s the design and interface language of gui software for at least 40 years and everyone should know it.

    System wide clipboard would work fine in the terminal but it would be a downgrade, you’d have to give up all the lovely buffers that all your different editors use and are designed around. Even lowly less has a buffer select somewhere in there. Most of the time shift-ctrl-v lets me dump the whatever the system clipboard is out into the command prompt if I need to.

    If the idea of using a different modality for editing text bugs you so much, what do you think of the fact that you already use one? When you’re typing your fingers are on the home row and when you need to edit you switch your right hand to the arrow and function keys. It’s a lot like how editing in vim requires me to move my right hand one key over to the left.

    That way of thinking is how I was able to accept learning vi keys and vim about twenty years ago when I had the same thoughts as you about new shortcuts.

    An alternative might be using macos. I can’t remember if it uses the mac keys to cut and paste into its terminals but it might.

  • I do not hate selecting text with shift. I do not even oppose selecting text with shift. The Macintosh user interface model is the standard for gui operations. It’s good to know how to use the interface of gui applications because usually the majority of your time will be spent in them.

    The terminal has a different interface. It’s different for a lot of reasons. Some are historical, some are technical, some are based on interface standards and ideas.

    I’m trying to help you understand how learning to use the terminal as it exists will be a better solution than making the terminal behave in the way you’re already familiar with.

    The reason it’s a better solution is that using the terminal as it exists allows you to more easily communicate and learn & allows you to use a broad range of tools on any system without having to import a bunch of configurations, programs or environment variables.

    It’s easy to read my comments and come to the conclusion that wanting to use the Macintosh text selection keys is the thing I think is stupid, but what I’m trying to reiterate in every reply is that making the terminal use Macintosh text selection keys is the thing I think is stupid.

    Part of learning how to use a computer is developing a combination of skills and tools that you can use to solve the problems that communicating by doing mathematics really fast always entails. I am trying to convince you to learn the toolbox the computers terminal comes with before you start to weld a tire iron on to your ratchet wrench.