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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/)RO
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30
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353
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1 yr. ago

choas

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  • Well, sure, with an image classifier, the bird identification is doable. I'm sure I could implement that if I went looking for some open source thingamabob that does that. But it's still not something I could actually understand. That part definitely hasn't changed over the years.

  • Programmer Humor @programming.dev

    A rather modern Runestone, erected in Lund, Sweden, at Ericsson building entrance, in honour of Danish king Harald Blåtand ("Bluetooth") Gormsson

  • I remember the last time I got messaged by some misogynist dipshit, way back in Halo 5, blaming me for losing the game. ...When he was the worst performing player in the team. I just stared at the post game report and wondered how the heck the dude even managed to get a ranking as low as he did.

  • I always preferred the C64C style keyboard where the graphics characters were in the top of the keycaps. This is my C64G (old breadbin style chassis but with C64C style colouring and keycaps):

    Quick summary: You get the left graphics character with the Commodore key (bottom left corner), and the right character with Shift key. By pressing Commodore+Shift, you swap between upper case + graphics characters mode and the upper case + lower case mode, applying to the entire screen (so you can't actually use the right graphics characters in that mode).

    Fun thing: To switch to another text colour you press Ctrl + number keys, with 8 colours available there, just as in the VIC-20. However, there's also another set of colours available with Commodore + number keys, for another 8 colours. I guess with Jack Tramiel's penny pinching, they didn't bother to mark those on the keys when making the next gen system.

  • Depends on the burrito. If it looks small enough that I can finish it without it starting to fall apart in my hands, then I probably can eat it that way. Most of the burritos in the local texmex places though? Yuge.

  • Permanently Deleted

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  • Frankly they should have nuked "OneNote for Windows 10" long ago and quietly replaced it with the Office version. Or better yet, not launch a separate version to begin with under the same name. But this is Microsoft, having multiple apps with the same name is just the norm.

  • AI business is owned by a tiny group of technobros, who have no concern for what they have to do to get the results they want ("fuck the copyright, especially fuck the natural resources") who want to be personally seen as the saviours of humanity (despite not being the ones who invented and implemented the actual tech) and, like all big wig biz boys, they want all the money.

    I don't have problems with AI tech in the principle, but I hate the current business direction and what the AI business encourages people to do and use the tech for.

  • In SMITE's case, the characters come from mythological sources and those sources are public domain. However, the way they're depicted was chosen by the game developer and their depictions are copyrighted by them.

    If someone copied the list of characters and made their own game with their own artwork and gameplay and everything, SMITE's creators could do absolutely nothing about it. But if they copied any substantial elements from SMITE directly, then it starts to go in the direction where lawyers start rising eyebrows. At that point it's no longer making original stuff based on the same PD material.

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  • I have no idea why the makers of LLM crawlers think it's a good idea to ignore bot rules. The rules are there for a reason and the reasons are often more complex than "well, we just don't want you to do that". They're usually more like "why would you even do that?"

    Ultimately you have to trust what the site owners say. The reason why, say, your favourite search engine returns the relevant Wikipedia pages and not bazillion random old page revisions from ages ago is that Wikipedia said "please crawl the most recent versions using canonical page names, and do not follow the links to the technical pages (including history)". Again: Why would anyone index those?

    • Seats smell very faintly of pee
    • On an unrelated note, the dashcam says "made in the USSR" for some reason
    • It's not a bomber, technically, but it does bomb a lot
    • but don't use that mode deliberately, because the ballistic system gets very confused sometimes and targets golf courses instead
    • ...I can't think of any more lame jokes, I've not had my morning covfefe
  • GIMP (at least in v2) does have a vector path tool and stores the paths with the image! Thing is, they kind of work like selections and you have to explicitly stroke the paths on bitmap layers. It's a bit more complicated than necessary and not easy to grasp at first.

  • For illustration work, having good support for both vector and bitmap elements is pretty damn convenient. For example, in comics, you draw the comics themselves in bitmap layers, while panels and speech bubbles go in vector layers. Having the ability to edit the speech bubbles easily is pretty neat.

    (Optimally inking/outlines would be vectors too, but most people prefer to do that with bitmap tools anyway, or vectorise later.)

    Krita actually does these pretty solidly - vector tools are there and they're pretty easy to use. In GIMP 2, the vector path support actually is there and the editable texts are actually pretty great, but it has the air of "power user trick, for those in the know" rather than something people actually discover easily. You also need to update the vector strokes manually. (Haven't tried GIMP 3 yet.) The fact that people still assume you can't do this stuff really says it all.

  • Well sure, but the summer actually makes up for it.

    (Personally: I'm from Finland, have had depression with seasonal pattern. Winters aren't that bad, early/late winter sucks though. Psychochemically, because the day length is noticeably changing and sleeping patterns get disturbed. Socially, because all sidewalks and walking paths get really slippery no matter how much sand and gravel they put there and going outside gets a bit scarier.)

  • The problem with cryptocurrencies is that you can explain it, without going to technical details, to a person with the intelligence of an average investment banker. (Which isn't much. Many animals make more profitable random investments when prompted.)

    Same with generative AI I guess.

  • Oh yeah, one of the pics that inspired me to study French. I was dreading the numerals but it's not that bad. You count tens and twenties and sometimes they're special. And numbers below 20 have specific names, but that's kinda true in most languages.

    A lot of languages have weird corner cases. (Like, in Finnish most numbers are perfectly regular. Except 11-19 which are not "one-ten-and-x" but rather "x-of-the-second". I'm sure there's a reasonable etymological reason. At least they're not "teens".)

  • Reddit @lemmy.world

    "War" (by ncomment)

    Games @lemmy.world

    Kids Relief: The $100M Charity Teaching Kids To Gamble In Roblox

    Malicious Compliance @lemmy.world

    Oh Google!

    196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    Milky Liquid Rule

    RetroGaming @lemmy.world

    Didn't know this was them.

    Videos @lemmy.world

    "Conflict", by Garri Bardin, 1983 Soviet anti-nuclear-war animated film

    Videos @lemmy.world

    AI Copyright Claimed My Last Video

    Dungeons and Dragons @lemmy.world

    Found some of my notes from 1994. Including some unfilled homemade character sheets. If you're playing BECMI, feel free to use this for period accurate retro feels

    aww @lemmy.world

    In zoos, many herbivores get to enjoy "seasonal vegetables". Giant tortoises like the spooky season in particular.

    Videos @lemmy.world

    How I Fell Out Of Love With Facebook (Tantacrul)

    196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    Machine Masters Shall Rule Over Us

    Programmer Humor @programming.dev

    Just browsing my photos from 10 years ago. I was amused when I browsed the university library computer science artificial intelligence shelf. ...I sometimes wish AI had stayed at this level.

    RetroGaming @lemmy.world

    Tusker - Desert Tune - Metal Version Remix (C64)

    Games @lemmy.world

    Todd Howard's exclusive 1,000G Xbox achievement appears after years of secrecy

    AI Generated Images @sh.itjust.works

    Teenage school children meeting a Galapagos tortoise at a city park in a Cyberpunk setting

    RetroGaming @lemmy.world

    Street Surfer (C64) - Theme music

    RetroGaming @lemmy.world

    A quick 600 DPI scan of my favourite non-chelonian ninja.

    Videos @lemmy.world

    "Conflict", by Garri Bardin, 1983.

    Ask Lemmy @lemmy.world

    What are the major world news that you got from weird sources (and maybe wish you had heard first from legit news sources)?