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2 yr. ago

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  • It's in a lot of program, not just ff. You can also see some letters are underlined in that menu, if you press that letter after alt, it would invoke that command or open that drop down without using the mouse. This is a convention at least from DOS, but I suspect it may be even older.

    So actually alt doesn't unhide the menu, it waits for a letter input to what command you want to start. It just happened that this old type of menu is hidden by default in a lot of programs and alt could be reused for this as well.

  • You can't do it on clearnet without some reputation either. I meant that you can register anonymously, than work yourself up to get some reputation and rights, than you can edit your favorite political post. I think the 2 things are orthogonal.

  • Interesting intersection, but what about the combined sidewalk-cyclelane in the distance. Here where I live cyclist hate when the bicycle lane is next to the sidewalk, because pedestrians accidentally wander to the cycleway frequently. They prefer when the cycleway is next to the road instead.

  • If they won't pay with it, isn't it just an email address with a password? If the laptop is company issued OP can just use their new compwny email address, than don't use that address for anything outside work related stuff.

  • I work around this by enabling rdp or ssh on guests as soon as possible and connect from my terminal for ssh, I use remmina for rdp, paste works there.

    I don't know other situations where I would need this.

  • 2017 was 7 year ago, Aaron died 11 years ago. There are a lot younger users who can't remember these things.

    Let's see a 20 years old university student was 13 when the source was closed down, I think it's not easy to find a 13 years old who is familiar with such legal things.

  • It's a feature of an Android app (I even guess it's preinstalled on some devices), and it was clearly stated in the title, that it's not an Android feature, but it's a feature of G**gle Authenticator.

    Yesterday you agreed to my comment, that the problem is when Android and other app features are mixed up. Here it's clearly stated that it's not an Android feature.

    You request more tight moderation, but unnecessarily strict mod control can kill communities. This news is related to Android, and isn't against any of the rules on the sidebar. If you don't want to see it downvote and move along. If a lot of us downvote it maybe OP will think differently and stop posting these articles.

  • Python is installed by default on all linux and mac systems, so it's just one more command to install pipx. From there just pipx install tagify. You don't need an installer, just specify the build tools in pyproject.toml: https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/specifications/pyproject-toml/#declaring-build-system-dependencies-the-build-system-table e.g. with setuptools: https://setuptools.pypa.io/en/latest/userguide/pyproject_config.html

    If you publish to pypi it will build the wheel files when you publish a version. That's the easiest way I know.

    Innosetup is windows only. On linux you don't need such a thing.

  • Some feedback:

    • On white background the text next to the logo is not visible
    • Add screenshots in the README, it's a GUI app
    • Requirements.txts for dependency management is the old way, read about pyproject.toml you can merge them a single easy to read and edit file
    • "Install the dependencies" means nothing to a non-python developer. Direct users to install your project via pipx, that's modern and secure way of installing a python application with dependencies for non developers. Publish it to pypi for even easier installation.
    • Add a notice that currently it's windows only os.path.join(os.environ["APPDATA"], "Tagify", "config.yaml") will fail on *nix systems. Use pathlib.Path instead of os.path. Use pathlib, I see on a lot more places it would make your life much easier.
    • I have a feeling that the file icons are not your work. If you copied them from somewhere make sure their license is compatible, and add an acknowledgement.

    Keep up the work, it seems like a nice project!

  • I'm also ok if both of them are posted here, as most people use android with Google Play Services (GMS). But I'm annoyed when the two used as a synonyms. E.g "Android will get a new XY feature" than I open the article and I see it will be a feature of GMS not mainline android.

    On a basic news website, or even in a more casual lemmy community I wouldn't be bothered with this. But we should be a bit more professional in a dedicated android community, with less clickbaity titles.

    BTW I use microG

  • Permanently Deleted

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  • It's a marketing article with nearly zero actual facts. One screenshot about the actual product.

    MS and others already use AI for drawing building countours for OpenStreetMap and OvertureMaps from aerial imagery. In osm these AI generated lines are only allowed to be imported after a human supervision and currently it's very hit or miss. On low density areas it's mostly good, but in dense city centers it's unusable.

    In overture maps these lines are imported automatically, that's why you can see buildings on rivers.

    They don't write about these shortcomings in the article, and how they solved AI hallucinations

  • It's documented in the wiki, they are called VCS packages, and it's not the usual, they work a bit differently: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/VCS_package_guidelines

    You can see in this instance, that it skips the sha checking for upstream source, in line 15 of the PKGBUILD it says 'SKIP': https://aur.archlinux.org/cgit/aur.git/tree/PKGBUILD?h=hyprspace-git#n15

    sha1sums parameter is documented in the wiki: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/PKGBUILD#sha1sums

    In the PKGBUILD file you can list sources (line 12,13) and their respective checksums (line 14,15). In this PKGBUILD there are 2 sources: the first is the systemd unit file, it's coming from the package's AUR repo, not from upstream, you can see its checksum. The second source is the actual source, and you can see, it's checksum is 'SKIP' so it shouldn't be checked.

    With these kind of packages you can't get notified if there is an update available, but if you install it again with your favorite AUR helper it would update itself for the latest version. It calculates version number from the latest commit hash, before building and installing, so if that is the same it won't update again.

  • It was 33rd in 2010:

    In November 2010, the Air Force Research Laboratory created a powerful supercomputer, nicknamed the "Condor Cluster", by connecting together 1,760 consoles with 168 GPUs and 84 coordinating servers in a parallel array capable of 500 trillion floating-point operations per second (500 TFLOPS). As built, the Condor Cluster was the 33rd largest supercomputer in the world and was used to analyze high definition satellite imagery at a cost of only one tenth that of a traditional supercomputer.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PlayStation_3_cluster

    https://phys.org/news/2010-12-air-playstation-3s-supercomputer.html