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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/)EV
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465
Joined
2 yr. ago

Indeed

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  • Interesting, I've installed it on quite a few machines now, all with widely varying hardware. Aside from my development/gaming rig I've got a shop laptop which is used by various goons to view shop drawings and look up parts, one the ex-wife still hasn't managed to break, one is my 9 year old daughter's and another is a potato that runs my 3d printer (to be fair this one is fossilized and doesn't get updates).

    All are working great with no setup effort and no maintenance so I guess it's a classic case of YMMV. I wouldn't have used Arch for any of those use cases except maybe the 3d printer.

  • Used to for one package - stupid tax filing software that won't run under Wine, likely because it's shitty garbage that was written in VB. The forms don't reflow properly.

    I had enough of the two systems trying to clobber each other's bootloaders and this year am running Tiny10 in a VM instead. The forms STILL don't reflow properly in anything except for VMWare. Don't ask me why, it's financial software and it always comes out broken and is patched just in time to file before the deadline.

    Steam's Proton and modern AMD drivers have been super effective in allowing me to do all my gaming on Linux now, and all my dev work always was. Don't see much reason for Windows these days.

  • Indeed

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  • This is why I run Manjaro, which I never hear any love for here for some reason. It's the rolling releases and cutting edge updates of Arch, but with the ease of use and reliability of Debian. Insert a bootable USB and have a fully functional system in a couple minutes.

    Manjaro just works, from gaming to development, and I've never been forced to play games to install a hardware driver or newer library that isn't part of the release like with Debian or Ubuntu.

    Been using Linux for over 20 years and never seen a distro so trouble free.

  • I tried this too and was similarly unimpressed! Good, but not amazing.

    IMO the best flavour to work ratio for potatoes is to cube them and toss them into an Actifry with either beef fat or coconut oil and salt. Get a ton of crispy surface with about 5 minutes of active work, including cleanup.

    Mashed is also super easy despite the above comment and is probably my go-to way to eat potatoes. Cube, pressure cook 7 min, mash with milk and butter. And I grow a ton of potatoes so I eat them almost every day 😁

  • I agree with you on HLS, the whole thing seems foolish. I meant more like SpaceX will chuck something around the moon for sport than that they would actually get HLS working. After all, SpaceX can already get to the moon, a lot of the recent payloads to the moon have flown on Falcon 9.

    The hardest part of getting to the moon is getting mass to orbit, and Starship just proved it could get mass to orbit, even if the reusable components didn't work out. Now they just need to put Blue Origin's lander inside the payload bay with a kick stage to send it off to the moon 😉 Doing a ton of refueling just to send an entire, oversized Starship as a lander makes no sense.

  • Tipping is really hard to rein in. Your suggestion of banning the "tipped wage" is good, but the regular minimum wage is so far below living wage already that paying people minimum wage still leaves them relying on tips.

    As a Canadian I refuse to participate in the "tip for everything" grift that has sprung up recently. However when we're down at the local bar and the service is great, the food is good, the waitress is friendly and cheerful, I want to leave a tip.

    Also as a Canadian, the Canadian Senate is an irrelevant relic that doesn't serve the same purpose as the US Senate, and should totally be abolished. But it's a totally different situation.

  • That and owning the company that makes the only reusable rockets on Earth, I guess.

    Musk is a twat but you can't deny that NASA is getting their money's worth out of their contracts with SpaceX.

    2 billion doesn't even pay for a single launch of SLS. And I wouldn't be surprised to see Starship land on the moon (or at least impact the moon, lol) before the next launch of SLS.

  • There's a divide though in "alien believers".

    I absolutely believe that other life exists in our vast universe. This is a pretty common opinion among scientific thinkers, space enthusiasts etc. that the universe is simply too huge for us to be all alone.

    I also believe that due to that vastness, we'll never meet any aliens, unless we punch into Europa someday and there happen to be some fish down there.

    UFO enthusiasts, on the other hand, have a position that is much less supported by science.

  • As a farmer Monsanto has done a lot of sketchy stuff, but I'd like to point out that "terminator crops" actually have a legitimate usage case. There's few worse weeds than volunteer herbicide-resistant canola, and if it just didn't come up next year it would be great.

    Almost all modern crops are hybrids anyways which don't breed true. Nobody is saving seed except in very specific cases and even small farmers aren't even planting bin-run wheat as modern genetics outperform it so greatly.

    If you want to save seed there are plenty of open-pollinated varieties out there but unfortunately most of them perform poorly compared to their modern hybrid counterparts, from field crops to garden vegetables.

  • Even with external volumes, I don't think there should be any mechanism where a container can escape a bind mount to affect the rest of the host fs? I use bind mounts all the time, far more than docker volumes.

  • I use emojis when talking to specific people, lol with others and some I don't use any text slang at all.

    Strangely because I grew up with lots of phpBB forums, the few of them that I still engage with for things like classic cars and farm talk I always use the emojis because that's what we always did :mrgreen:

  • Surprisingly it's been wiping since 93 with no issues! Unless it was changed by a previous owner. I should probably take it apart and repack the gearbox at this point, though. It slows down quite a bit if the windshield isn't wet enough, implying there's some drag in the system.

    Back in the early 90s Mercedes were a lot different from how they are today, that car is put together so well that those old diesels are considered a true million mile car. Lots of things on it are really easy to take apart and maintain, too.

    The only thing really failing on it is the paint which is cracked all to hell, and I'm honestly considering getting a repaint since there are only 200k miles on it. It helps that I'm friends with a body man/painter who can do it in his garage for a fraction of the cost.