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3 yr. ago

  • Came here to link to this. Open hardware computers are a thing, they're just really pricey.

  • When I was in high school, before smartphones, I would sit on the left side of the classroom, put my flip phone in my left hand next to my thigh, and play Tetris one handed. I'd have my pencil in my right hand to make it look like I was taking notes and would pause periodically to look up and look like I was paying attention. It got me through the vast majority of classes haha.

  • That is certainly not the only reason why EVs are still so expensive. Raw materials for batteries are a large portion of their cost. Currently, the cost of many of these raw materials does not account for a living wage for miners or the impacts mining can have on miners and the surrounding environment, and still the raw materials cost is a large portion of the cost of the batteries. Sure, there could be some magic new battery chemistry that circumvents this issue, but it's unreasonable to expect that. The previous data showing drops in car battery prices could keep going down, sure, but it's more complicated than simply economics of scale.

  • I wasn't able to stay awake to stream (I'm 8 hours behind), but I'm gonna watch a bunch of talks later for sure.

  • In the USA, currently roughly 25% of light vehicles on the road are 20 years old or older [1]. The average age of light vehicles on the road is steadily increasing [2]. The current federal target is that 50% of new cars sold in 2030 will be electric [3]. I don't know what you consider "common," but with these data, I wouldn't be surprised if 20% or more of cars on the road in 2050 were still ICE, and this doesn't even take into account larger vehicles like busses and trucks, which tend to stay in operation for much longer [4].

    If batteries get significantly cheaper, charging infrastructure gets significantly better, oil & gas pricing starts to include its environmental cost, and public transit becomes much easier for those that really can't afford anything but the cheapest car, then all this might change.

    One of the big problems with "ICE vehicles will become unaffordable", is that the ICE cars themselves will get cheaper, and for people with less income, it's the big upfront cost of electric cars that keeps them from switching. If a person cannot afford to pay for an electric car out of pocket (it tends to be difficult for poorer people to get access to loans and for loans to be available for older cars), then they will be forced to pay for gas at whatever price it costs.

    [1] https://hedgescompany.com/blog/2022/02/how-old-are-cars/

    [2] https://www.bts.gov/content/average-age-automobiles-and-trucks-operation-united-states

    [3] https://cars.usnews.com/cars-trucks/features/will-us-reach-50-percent-evs-by-2030

    [4] https://www.motorbiscuit.com/how-old-average-semi-truck-versus-average-car/

  • I use todo.txt format todo lists.

    On desktop, I use sleek, which is FOSS.

    On mobile, there are a couple FOSS options, but they all kinda suck, so I use obsidian with a todo.txt plugin that works pretty well for viewing and checking off items.

  • I'm excited for the premium RSS feed. 404media has some of the best reporting in recent memory, and being able to read the full text of all their articles on my RSS reader, plus having access to an ad-free podcast RSS feed with bonus content makes the $100/year membership price entirely worth it.

    Now if only aftermath.site had a full-text premium RSS feed, I'd be all set.

  • Proxmox w/Debian, TrueNAS Scale, and Home Assistant VMs w/(usually Alpine) Docker containers in some VMs

  • I don't understand "collecting"

    Don't get me wrong, there are a few categories of things I have a lot of, like film cameras, but that's because I started with cheaper ones, and kept getting better ones as I became more sure that film photography was a thing I wanted to do.

    But, for instance, I have friends who collect MLB bobbleheads just for the sake of collecting, and I'll never understand that.

  • I'm looking for the same thing but with the added difficultly of wanting live collaboration in notes, primarily so I can use it for grocery shopping with my partner, but for other stuff we do together, too. Hedgedoc 2.0 is what I have my eye on the most.

    The current Hedgedoc checks boxes 2 and 3 for you, but not box 1. You can check/uncheck checkboxes in view mode, though. I'm at the point now where I don't really care too much about having a wysiwyg editor for my workflow, but I understand if it's not what you need.

    They have a demo here: https://demo.hedgedoc.org/

    The other biggest downside is how 1.x handles navigating to different notes. It uses a "history" page which works alright, but isn't very organized. 2.0 will include an "explore" page that will be much better.

  • The Gagguino project is a counterpoint to this. They have some extremely limited documentation, but to really build one you probably are going to need to dig into Discord. I hate it. The project is really cool, though, and I'm building one right now.

  • The COPR package didn't work for me on Nobara, so I had to build from source, but it works great. There are a couple of things I don't like, but overall seems pretty neat.

    If I can get Xwayland to work nicely for steam with high refresh rates, then it seems like this might be the WM for me until COSMIC-DE comes out.

  • As others have stated, porkbun + cloudflare + ddclient will do everything you need.

  • I'm in. The multiplayer games that I mostly play are Civ 5/6, BG3, and Tetris Effect.

  • I'm looking forward to Ara: History Untold, but I'm biased bc my buddy is developing their AI system.

  • The mouse was never the best tool for a lot of computing jobs, it was just what caught on.

    I still primarily use my computers as a desktop, and I don't like it when software requires me to reach over to my pointing device. When it does, the majority of the time I reach for a trackball which is far more comfortable.

    After dabbling with tiling windows managers in Linux some years ago, I came to realize that pointing devices are often the slow way to do things.

    The main thing I want a pointing device for these days is for scrolling through documents and web pages, and the vast majority of mice are just bad at that. Precision scrolling is only available on a handful of mice, and its niche enough that consistent software implementation is just not a thing.

    I'll still keep a mouse on hand for playing the occasional video game that works better with one, but that's not really how I like to play games usually.

  • I totally empathize. I did the same thing at the end of 2020 and just switched to an AMD GPU last month.

  • What hardware do you have? I have all AMD, and it works just fine on Nobara on Wayland.