Skip Navigation

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/)UT
Posts
2
Comments
797
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • Fingerprint readers, in general, also widely seem to be poorly supported.

    Not sure if it technically counts as fingerprint readers but using my YubiKey Bio daily, for login on my desktop and WebAuthN and... 0 problem.

  • voice actor, artist, and musician. My main concern is recording software and to a lesser extent, art software

    Even if you are not based in Brussels where we have https://resonance-mao.be/ you might have a local equivalent, namely open source and open hardware music enthusiast and profesisonals who meet monthly at least to learn and jam. They know this domain a lot more than I do. There are a LOT of software for all that but I wouldn't go as far as advising you. That said yes it mostly likely will require a bit of re-training. Still IMHO you have done the hardest, namely you understand the concepts behind what the tools do. The interface will be different but how it is actually done should be the same. My advice is to find "your people" and discover together.

    Regarding hardware Mint is based on Ubuntu which is based on Debian. I have an NVIDIA GPU and I play (and work) with it daily. Sometimes sleep/resume is buggy but pretty much never ever while actually working or playing. Regarding the Webcam, it's not super convenient but until it gets supported (hopefully) you might have to rely on an external camera.

  • Neat! Two quick things :

    I’m not convinced Linux has comparable software I need).

    Feel free to ask here. I might not know alternatives but others could, no matter how niche.

    Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Ultra [...] didn’t play well unfortunately

    Same advice. I don't have one of these but what fails and how? Any specific error message?

  • The lack of support seems very daunting at first.

    I started thinking "Oh I wish I could transition to Linux, away from Windows, but what about the latest hardware or random gadget?"

    The trick is to flip the question around, namely not "Does my current hardware work with Linux?" but rather "Am I sure my next hardware work well with Linux BEFORE I buy it?" then this remove 99% of headaches. It's typically 1 Web search away from either a lot of complaints or positive feedback... or not much, and then it's up to you to see if you are ready for an adventure. If there is not much but there is some standard interface, e.g. Bluetooth, and no need for a proprietary application, it's nearly sure the main features will work. If a proprietary application is needed, then safer to avoid.

    So.... yes maybe surprisingly a LOT of hardware does work well with Linux!

    What does not work for me, to give a random example, is the LED controller of my desktop case, which I bought several years ago while Windows was still my main OS. I didn't put a lot of effort into it, cf https://gitlab.com/CalcProgrammer1/OpenRGB/-/issues/1683 but the recent article posted on this instance, namely https://lemmy.ml/post/32389687 makes me want to give it another go at some point!

  • Shit... kind of makes me want to learn Rust now!

    Anyway, wonderful write up. No BS, both shortcuts if you just want to the code and in depth links e.g. https://www.beyondlogic.org/usbnutshell/usb1.shtml all written with a fun tone. Plenty of actually useful content showing us all that sure, it is not trivial to write a (USB) driver but it is also probably not as hard as we imagine. Particularly enjoyed the :

    • userspace driver, namely being able to tinker locally without feel the pressure to push back the work to Linux the kernel itself
    • libusb and other drivers, namely that there is a myriad of points to start from already, not just writing reverse engineering bits in memory to the new device and hoping it'll work
  • No idea where they live but here in Brussels there is public data available so it's relatively easy to keep track of different kind of particles in the air. I imagine there is a proxy for how busy a city is on a specific day that would help make a correlation with some assumptions. https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/ must have something on both.

  • Focus on productivity and pleasure, so make the transition easier :

    • try Linux without dual boot, e.g. https://distrosea.com/ (I made a 30min video discussion if you are curious)
    • try Linux on a USB stick to get persistence and not be afraid of using private data
    • try dual boot with default on Windows, your important data backed-up (e.g. music you created)
    • try dual boot with default on Linux and Ableton or whatever you need on Wine, if it doesn't work in virtual machine
    • try boot on just Linux with Wine
    • try boot on Linux with Ableton FLOSS equivalents (few listed in this thread)
    • try boot on Linux with e.g Ardour or LMMS but genuinely benefit from FLOSS by making and sharing your own plugins

    The entire process must be risk free and fun!

  • conjure up an email summary within seconds that can shave off up to 5 whole minutes

    ... but can it? Like actually, can one do that?

    Sure an LLM can generate something akin to a summary. It will look like it's getting some of the points in a different form... but did it get the actual gist of it? Did it skip anything meaningful that once ignore will have far reaching consequences?

    So yes sure an LLM can generate shorter text related to what was said during the meeting but if there is limited confidence in the accuracy and no responsibility, unlike somebody who would take notes and summarize potentially facing negative consequences, then wouldn't the reliance on such a tool create more risk?

  • No I did not and I'm not sure what you imagine "regular users" might be. I feel that if someone goes the extra length to get their browser outside of a store, they can do the same with extensions, is it extravagant?

  • You do not have to care. I'm only highlighting that according to this community your post is precisely not "informing" much.

    Also while checking your history https://lemmy.ml/post/19526546 it seems to be a pattern of misunderstanding then blaming it on others.

    I guess that's what not arguing over petty details like "technical definitions" might result in.

    Please do not use Proton if you do not think it's appropriate for your usage. Please do inform others about problems you do encounter. Please do note though that when you are misrepresenting the situation, e.g. with titles that are shortcuts and thus incorrect, you are NOT helping.

  • Because you wouldn't be actually switching so that's not lock-in, that's just you expecting free stuff forever.

    Anyway, I understand your point. I also want free stuff and I also want all my free stuff to be exactly what I need. My criticism is more than you selecting a provider, not paying for it, know what the problem is then complain it's not what you need despite knowing it in advance. What also was problematic for me is that your title is not correct.

    Finally, maybe you are technically right (which I do not believe) but you can see from the total number of downvotes to your post and the upvotes on my comments that, at least in this community, your interpretation is being quite criticized.

    To end on a pragmatic note : please PLEASE do get funding (it does not have to be your own money) for Proton to provide forwarding for free for all email addresses. I'm sure nobody on this community would complain about that, I surely won't!

    PS: if you are into lock-in and tech, consider reading "Information Rules: A Strategic Guide to the Network Economy" by Carl Shapiro and Hal R. Varian - ISBN 087584863X - Harvard Business Press 1998 and if it's a bit too much here are my notes on it https://fabien.benetou.fr/ReadingNotes/InformationRules written 15 years ago.