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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/)HA
Posts
10
Comments
494
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • What has kept me away from Wayland is the tendency to be dependent on the compositor for so much.

    I use my preferred X11 window manager for largely aesthetic reasons, but by and large, I can swap it out and the rest of the software doesn't give a damn. At most, you might have to tweak a RC file to fix missing custom assumptions (i. e. disabling decorations on full-screenified Proton games)

    It seems like on Wayland, there's a lot more of a "if you aren't using GNOME or KDE, the odds something meaningful breaks are much higher." Aside from the perceived bulk of these environments, they're highly opinionated-- I suspect it would be a major production number to hammer them into a shape that looked like FVWM or WindowMaker, even if you only wanted to match a single theme's aesthetics (as opposed to, say, FVWM's dynamic configurability).

  • I'm mostly interest in that drop on the "Homosexuality" chart in Q3. I know Steve is carrying that department, but really, we can't let the numbers go to shit every time he takes a week off to visit his parents!

  • Perhaps, to keep it manageable, run an hourly cron job that looks at images, say, 15-90 minutes old. 15 minutes-- or maybe even an hour is long enough to create a post to use the image to prevent false positives, and looking back more than an hour hours helps avoid a window that misses the scan.

  • I disagree. The best form of short range public transit is the cross breed of a streetcar and a wedge-type snowplow. Forget stopping for cars that ignore the "red light for streetcar crossing" lights, just bifurcate them and keep moving.

  • On a station level basis, even if you can't do servicing piecemeal (refurbish the northbound platform, then the southbound one), most subways have stops within "walk but somewhat inconvenient" distance-- 1km or less apart. You can often annoy out-of-towners by giving them an itinerary that results in them changing trains three times and spending 45 minutes to get between two stations within line of sight of each other.

    But seriously, for people with extreme access needs, I wonder if putting a few of those "multi row golf cart" style mini electric vehicles looping around could provide stopgap service to the nearest operating station.

    We already need some degree of spare capacity; how does the service survive in the event of an accident if there's no double-tracking?

    Wait, I know this one. Toronto intended to retire an entire subway line in late 2023 (claiming it was already past the end-of-life for the equipment, and promising it would be replaced with new subways in 2030. They ended up shuttering it months earlier because of a derailment. (https://www.ttc.ca/about-the-ttc/projects-and-plans/Future-of-Line-3-Scarborough)

  • This is effective infrastructure use. Instead of having to run cell service or wifi in the tunnels just so people can browse porn on their phones, they bring the smut directly to you.

  • I'll drop in because I'm sort of dissatisfied with my Thinkpad E585 and don't need to start another similar thread. The performance is sufficient (On 8G of RAM and an aftermarket SSD, should break a $20 note and go for 16), but the screen's dim and unpleasant, the battery life is less than stellar, and the build and servicability is hardly the same as the X230 Tablet it replaced.

    But I love eraser pointers. Work assigned me a Dell with a 7th gen Core i5 a few years ago, and their eraser was far worse (I think the drivers, particularly using middle button for scroll, were the likely source of the suckage, but I was docking it to external pointing devices anyway). Is there anything else out there worth investigating? I thought some HP ProBook or Elitebook models have one, but I'm not sure if it's actually a decent execution. Probably doesn't help that I tend to be very Ryzen-oriented (too many AMD shares I bought too cheap to be not obsessed) and so this was among the very first Ryzen Thinkpads.

    Maybe I just need to get a refurbished/newer "better line" Thinkpad rather than the "barely qualifies as a Thinkpad" E-series.

  • There is an entire industry "domaining" that trades domain names like baseball cards. It usually boils down to two things:

    • People register pdrq.com because they hope someone will have a wonderful new product named PDRQ later and will pay $10,000 for a domain that cost them $11.
    • Even if there's no direct buyer, there are services that will run low-quality ads on the page. and you can more or less estimate traffic and revenue from typos or dead links pointing to the domain. A three character domain, all letters, will get more than 12 characters with random digits mixed in. If you get $12 a year of random clicks seeing ads for "hot singles in your area offering PDRQ", you're ahead and can justify holding it as part of a portfolio.
  • What worries me about the "systemd does everything as a tightly integrated package" is the too-big-to-fail aspect. I'd be worried that we're seeing a lot of configurations that can't be pulled apart piecemeal-- for example, if you need a feature not available in systemd, or you need to deactivate a systemd component due to an unfixed vulnerability. It feels like there's value in supporting a non-systemd init in the same way there's value for individual packages to support an architecture beyond x86-64-- you get some extra checks that you aren't making assumptions that only work for a specific happy path.

  • To expand on this, "school choice" is sold to several different audiences:

    • The well-intentioned parents who say "I can pull my kids out of a 'failed' public school" which only serves to remove anyone who might provide accountability or volunteer support for said schools, creating a death spiral. Fixing this would require some way to make parents understand the common-good aspect. You might be trying to help your own little Timmy today, but at the expense of everyone, inclluding Little Timmy in 2055 when the skilled-worker economy has tanked in his hometown.
    • The whackjob brigades, who will gravitate to whichever school gets the closest to teaching the Bible as literal fact while still qualifying for as a non-private school that thus getting the costs covered by the state. In most cases, we don't want these parents anywhere near decision making processes.
    • Narrow use cases where there's a viable argument for a different school program. Some charter schools positioned themselves as "last chance" programs, offering things like customized schedules for kids forced to choose between high school and work, or online-only programs before Covid made it a big deal. A sufficiently resourced public school system should have similar ability to offer options, but if you have a lot of small districts, maybe they need some ability to form cooperatives to fill these gaps.

    I never quote understood the patchwork of school systems in the US-- one town might say "all the schools under one district, covering 80,000 students" and the next town has five different districts for elementary only, then others for high schools, and none of them have market-making buying power for anything from textbooks to teachers.

  • The thing you must understand about /r/mk is that it was largely sheperded by a man who was driven from the other major mechanical keyboard forums for being too much of a self-promoter. It's possible the entire organization still has residual brittle-ego.

    If you want proper keyboard discussion, do check Deskthority; the content is a lot richer than "here's a photo of my board which is just a Taco Bell permutation of the current popular PCB/case/caps/switches"

  • The instance I use is ran by a bunch of Unix nerds, so I'd expect them to wear their uptime as a badge of honour. I suspect there's probably a sweet spot for instance size, where it doesn't hit the biggest scaling problems, but big enough to justify the ongoing effort, rather than obviously being a one-man shop that will vanish when his cheque to Digital Ocean bounces.

  • Even if it blew up in their face, I could see a non-sycophant reason for supplying Trump a bond, potentially with sweetheart terms: it would be the ultimate marketing coup within the industry. "We bailed out the highest profile defendant in American history, sure we can help you with your sixth DUI of the week!"

  • I recall a while ago seeing an interview with the consultant who did a bunch of team logo redesigns, and the basic takeaway was that everything needed to be hyper-aggressive stuff that 10-year-old boys would love. I recall it seemed to involve a lot of replacing mascots that used to be inanimate concepts with muscular, aggressive anthromorphic characters (the pre-2005 logo was just the college's coat of arms, now it's a pallette swap of someone's fursona)

    Let's go the completely opposite direction. Let's rename the New York Jets the New York Kittens and have Sanrio design the logo. White uniform with pink and milk-chocolate brown trim. Little ears on the helmets.