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2 yr. ago

  • Did you manage to install Linux to your second drive?

  • Do you mean your Windows boot partition?

    Windows does not support installing the boot partition on a different drive out of the box. Unless you modified your Windows installation, the drive where Windows is installed is also where the Windows boot manager lives.

    The biggest risk with installing with the drive connected is accidentally installing the Linux boot partition over the Windows boot partition, hence the usual recommendation to disconnect the drive just to be safe.

    You're gonna have to provide some more details on your setup and what is working/not working though.

  • Copying from an older comment of mine:

    IPv6 is pretty much identical to IPv4 in terms of functionality.

    The biggest difference is that there is no more need for NAT with IPv6 because of the sheer amount of IPv6 addresses available. Every device in an IPv6 network gets their own public IP.

    For example: I get 1 public IPv4 address from my ISP but 4,722,366,482,869,645,213,696 IPv6 addresses. That’s a number I can’t even pronounce and it’s just for me.

    There are a few advantages that this brings:

    • Any client in the network can get a fresh IP every day to reduce tracking
    • It is pretty much impossible to run a full network scan on this amount of IP addresses
    • Every device can expose their own service on their own IP (For example: You can run multiple web servers on the same port without a reverse proxy or multiple people can host their own game server on the same port)

    There are some more smaller changes that improve performance compared to IPv4, but it’s minimal.

    My unifi kit can convert us to IPv6 but I’m hesitant without knowing what devices it will break.

    You don't usually "convert" to IPv6 but run in dual stack, with both IPv4 and IPv6 working simultaneously. Make sure your ISP supports IPv6 first, there is little use to only run IPv6 internally.

  • I finally got IPv6 working in Docker Swarm...by moving from Docker Swarm to regular Docker.

    Traefik now properly gets IPv6 addresses and forwards them to the backend.

  • Piece of shit.

    Docker on Windows is was what ended up pushing me to Linux on my workstation. What an absolute pain in the ass.

  • Neat, have been wanting something like this for a while now. The current value shown is pretty useless when transferring over network and the speed fluctuates quite a bit.

  • Why does an AI require a gazillion pages to learn, but the quality is still unimpressive?

    Because humans learn how to read and interpret those pages in school. Give that book to a toddler and not much will happen other than some bite marks.

    AI needs to learn the language structure, grammar, math, logic, reasoning, problem solving and much more before it can even be trained with anything useful. Humans take years to acquire those skills, AI takes more content but can do that training much faster.

    Maybe it is the wrong way to train machines but for now we have not invented robot schools yet so it's the best we got.

    By the way, I still think companies should be banned from training with copyrighted content and user data behind closed doors. Keep your models in public domain or get out.

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  • I'll check out Dreame, I have not heard much about them.

    Roborock, Dreame and Xiaomi are functionally almost identical. Some of them even share the same parts.

    If you want to root them, get a Dreame or a Xiaomi. Most of them are rootable without disassembly, see the list linked above.

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  • I rooted both of my Roborock S6.

    If you can solder and have an UART USB cable, it's not really hard to do. Technically you can flash it by just holding your UART adapter against the solder pads but soldering them on definitely makes it easier.

    There's a full video guide on how to dissassemble and root here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9PoaNtZCJRZc61c792VCr_I6jQK_IdSb

    Firmware and everything else is here: https://builder.dontvacuum.me/_s6.html

    Also, if you don't have a Roborock yet, the Dreame models are significantly easier to root. Don't even have to disassemble most of them.

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  • I played quite a bit of Elite: Dangerous in VR on my Saitek X-55 in Linux. Worked out of the box.

  • Dope, seems to not have landed yet in LineageOS but the Terminal app is already installed. Just missing the toggle in the developer options.

  • With the latest release of android it now supports some Linux functionality.

    Wait, it does? Gonna have to check that out.

  • I disagree, LLMs have been very helpful for me and I do not see how an open source AI model trained with open source datasets is detrimental to society.

  • I'll bite, what is malicious about this?

  • Kojima-san, where is my PC pre-order trailer?

  • In case you didn't know, you can send a YouTube URL to Kodi by sharing it from your phone to the Kore app.

    So you can do your browsing on your phone/tablet and when you want to watch something on the big screen, you just share it with the Kore app and it will start playing.

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  • This doesn't make any sense to me either. Why do they need a license for what you type into Firefox if that data never gets shared with Mozilla?

    I don't know a single application that you need to give a license to so they can handle your data locally.

  • What? X11 has zero HDR support.