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/)AF
Posts
1
Comments
32
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • They’ve made it too niche, basically just fps and rts pad.

    I loved mine for Rocket league but was really missing the right stick. And the shoulder buttons were super stiff. And you also absolutely had to set up controls because it was so different and the pads were atrocious replacements for dpad or sticks

  • I’m not sure if I’m doing something wrong here, but openwebui has been weird for me. I’ve tried running nanonets-ocr, but it only read the last lines visible on a photo. And other models would start reprocessing the whole chat and ignoring the last image I post, answering with the context of the previous reply instead… Using the websearch is easy with it though, so I think I’ll keep an eye on it and maybe will try again later

  • Yeah, it kind of what it was in the beginning, wasn't it? I remember telling people that it was just like Netflix for games, both in the positive and in the negative sense. And Netflix was still viewed more positively at that point.

  • Ok, turned out to be as simple to run as downloading llama.cpp binaries, gguf of gemma3 and an mmproj file and running it all like this

     
        
    ./llama-server -m ~/LLM-models/gemma-3-4b-it-qat-IQ4_NL.gguf --mmproj ~/LLM-models/gemma-3-4b-it-qat-mmproj-F16.gguf --port 5002
    
    
      

    (Could be even easier if I’d let it download weights itself, and just used -hf option instead of -m and —mmproj).

    And now I can use it from my browser at localhost:5002, llama.cpp already provides an interface there that supports images!

    Tested high resolution images and it seems to either downscale or cut them into chunks or both, but the main thing is that 20 megapixels photos work fine, even on my laptop with no gpu, they just take a couple of minutes to get processed. And while 4b model is not very smart (especially quantized), it could still read and translate text for me.

    Need to test more with other models but just wanted to leave this here already in case someone stumbles upon this question and wants to do it themselves. It turned out to be much more accessible than expected.

  • Thank you for doing these!

    And I still don’t get what is the value proposition for the Junk Store when Heroic exists, seems like it allows for less tinkering and I don’t see it as a positive thing considering how janky the Linux experience can still be at times

  • I hate this Microsoft cycle so much: buy gaming studios, do fuck all with them, fire all staff, close studios, rinse, repeat. So much talent and so many great IPs down the drain because MS can’t decide what the fuck are they doing

  • Enter the Matrix, I loved the slowmo effects and the fights, the first hallway scene felt like it was straight from the movie. Using the computer terminal to unlock stuff felt magical. Only later I learned that Path of Neo was supposed to be a better Matrix game while Enter the Matrix was universally panned. And I’ve played it too, but didn’t get as much enjoyment out of it, it just didn’t have as much soul

  • Github is a platform to upload your code to using git (a source code versioning system that allows you to store different versions of your program code, history of all changes to it, etc., and to collaborate with other people to work on the same project with each person working on their own part and then merging the changes together). You can check other people’s projects, upload yours, leave comments, create issue reports, copy others’ work and make a “fork” of the software, and much more. Among other things you can download the latest releases of the software provided by the developers, usually installation instructions are provided on the project page, and the latest releases can be found under the Releases tab.