Just some Internet guy

He/him/them 🏳️‍🌈

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 25th, 2023

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  • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.metoLinux Gaming@lemmy.worldPewDiePie has switched to Linux
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    7 hours ago

    There hasn’t been a history of behaviour resembling that of the ideals of Nazis from Felix, especially not enough to say that he partakes in those ideologies. Thankfully his "dark humour " phase ended years ago and he isn’t doing these things anymore, so completely estranging him from anything for it is quite extreme, especially when I have seem some of this sentiment on Lemmy myself. Nor do I think he’s a horrible person for edgy comments and actions that most of us have definitely done one way or another on the Internet.

    That. He would have started YouTube at 20 and the guy is now 35. That would have happened when he was 28.

    People change, people learn. That one in particular hit him hard and probably led to a lot of self reflection and all that stuff.

    We have actual nazis to deal with that actually think it’s a good idea. There’s a huge difference between a bad dark joke and actually supporting facism. How one responds after such an incident matters a lot.

    Meanwhile Elon did a literal nazi salute and isn’t even denying it nor apologizing and doubling down on it.

    I had my share of hitler jokes, but they were told on a context when it was seen as poking fun at a solved issue of the past in a very progressive area, when nobody thought we’d be dumb enough to witness facism ever again. Context and meaning are both very important before labeling someone for life.


  • To clarify a little bit for OP: the same sound device is shared between the laptop’s speakers, headphone jack and its video outputs like HDMI.

    It’s the same sound card but under a different profile to send the audio to the HDMI instead. Technically the same also happens but more automatically when you plug in wired headphone, it triggers a port switch. It’s an either or situation: it can only do one at a time except on some chipsets. That used to be an interesting audio quirk back in the days: plug in headphones and it keeps playing through the laptop speakers.

    Plasma only shows independent audio devices because it’s not just a global audio device selector, you can also select individual apps to go to different audio devices, for example an external mixer and a dedicated music channel.





  • Yes, admins can see all the votes.

    You’re kind of a downvote collector so it wasn’t easy, but I didn’t actually see all that much brigading. Seeing some repeat usernames and one occurrence that looks like someone did go through your profile and downvote most comments about a certain topic once, but that’s all I could find. Most set of downvotes are confined to a given post.

    You’re really just getting downvoted a lot by a lot of different people. Your downvotes on this post have nothing in common with your other downvotes.

    EDIT: Nevermind, there is indeed 2 people downvoting every comment from OP.


  • It does, I wrote it in corrupted text for a reason, but if you want something functional you can use it and then see how it set it up for you and still go set up the rest of the services yourself.

    When I switched to Arch, it used the Arch Install Framework, that predates even pacstrap, and I still learned a fair bit. Although the now normal pacstrap really doesn’t hide how the bootstrapping works which is really nice especially for learning.

    Point is mostly if OP is too terried they can test the waters with archinstall (ideally in a VM).


  • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.metoLinux@lemmy.worldGraduating from user to power user
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    9 days ago

    I DONT want to build a system from the ground up, which I expect to be a common suggestion.

    Arch kind of is building from the ground up, but without all the compiling and stuff. It’s really not as hard as it sounds especially if you use a̶r̴c̷h̴i̵n̵s̴t̷a̶l̷l̵ and you do get the experience of learning how it all fits together through the great ArchWiki.

    That said one can learn a lot even on Debian/Ubuntu/Pop_OS. I graduated to Arch after I felt like apt was more in my way than convenient and kept breaking on me so I was itching for a more reliable distro. But for stuff like managing systemd services and messing with Wayland, definitely doable on a Debian/Ubuntu/Pop distro. Just use the terminal more really, and it’ll come slowly through exposure.



  • I think we’re still deeply into the “shove it everywhere we can” hype era of AI and it’ll eventually die down a bit, as it with any new major technological leap. The same fears and thoughts were present when computers came along, then affordable home computers, and affordable Internet access.

    AI can be useful it used correctly but right now we’re trying to put it everywhere for rather dubious gains. I’ve seen coworkers mess with AI until it generates the right code for much longer than it would take to hand write it.

    I’ve seen it being used quite successfully in the tech support field, because an AI is perfectly good at asking the customer if they’ve tried turning it off and then back on again, and make sure it’s plugged in. People would hate it I’m sure on principle, but the amount of repetitive “the user can’t figure out something super basic” is very common in tech support and would let them focus a lot of their time on actual problems. It’s actually smarter than many T1 techs I’ve worked with, because at least the AI won’t sent the Windows instructions to a Mac user and then accuse them of not wanting to try the troubleshooting steps (yes, I’ve actually seen that happen). But you’ll still need humans for anything that’s not a canned answer or known issue.

    One big problem is when the AI won’t work can be somewhat unpredictable especially if you’re not yourself fairly knowledgeable of how the AIs actually work. So something you think would normally take you say 4 hours and you expect done in 2 with AI might end up being an 8h task anyway. It’s the eternal layoff/hires cycle in tech: oh we have React Native now, we can just have the web team do the mobile apps and fire the iOS and Android teams. And then they end up hiring another iOS and Android team because it’s a pain in the ass to maintain and make work anyway and you still need the special knowledge.

    We’re still quite some ways out from being able to remove the human pilot in front. It’s easy to miss how much an experienced worker implicitly guides the AI the right direction. “Rewrite this with the XYZ algorithm” still needs the human worker to have experience with it and enough knowledge to know it’s the better solution. Putting inexperienced people at the helm with AI works for a while but eventually it’s gonna be a massive clusterfuck only the best will be able to undo. It’s still just going to be a useful tool to have for a while.


  • It works so well, if you stretch a window across more than one monitors of different refresh rates, it’ll be able to vsync to all of them at once. I’m not sure if it’ll VRR across multiple monitors at once, but it’s definitely possible. Fullscreen on a single monitor definitely VRRs properly.

    With my 60+144+60 setup and glxgears stretched across all of them, the framerate locks to something between like 215-235 as the monitors go in and out of sync with eachother, and none of them have any skips or tears. Some games get a little bit confused if the timing logic is tied to frame rate, but triple monitor Minecraft works great apart from the lack of FOV correction for the side monitors.

    This is compositor dependent but I think most of the big compositors these days have it figured out. I’m on the latest KDE release with KWin.







  • The website requests an image or whatever from 27748626267848298474.example.com, where the number is unique for the visitor. To load the content the browser has to resolve the DNS for it, and the randomness ensures it won’t be cached anywhere as it’s just for you. So it queries its DNS server which queries your DNS provider which queries the website’s DNS server. From there the website’s DNS server can see where the request came from and the website can tell you where it came from and who it’s associated with if known.

    Yes it absolutely can be used for fingerprinting. Everything can be used for fingerprinting, and we refuse to fix it because “but who thinks of the ad companies???”.




  • It’s going to depend on how the access is set up. It could be set up such that the only way into that network is via that browser thing.

    You can always connect to yourself from the Windows machine and tunnel SSH over that, but it’s likely you’ll hit a firewall or possibly even a TLS MitM box.

    Virtual desktops like that are usually used for security, it would be way cheaper and easier to just VPN your workstation in. Everything about this feels like a regulated or certified secure environment like payment processing/bank/government stuff.