Instance: programming.dev
Joined: 2 years ago
Posts: 25
Comments: 186
New account since lemmyrs.org went down, other @Deebsters are available.
Posts and Comments by Deebster, deebster@programming.dev
Comments by Deebster, deebster@programming.dev
I had to laugh - that lot have absolutely no clue when it comes to security. Even in a VM I’m not sure I’d trust running Clawdbot (or whatever it’s named this week).
On a Boeing, they’re zip ties holding them together
It’s a lot quicker than reading it! It’s nearly half a million words, over if you include The Hobbit/Silmarillion.
Someone was claiming that the early chapters (I think it was the Old Forest stuff, after they left the Shire) were purposely written in a dense, slow style to make the reader really feel the weary progress. I don’t think I believe that, but it’s an interesting possibility.
I’d assume that most people are familiar with the term Trekkie, but would have to use context to figure out Trekker ("you like long walks?")
Whatever the intention, coining/identifying as a separate term suggests someone taking it quite seriously. I just consider them synonyms.
edit: FYI, this shop is OP’s shop
Found them! This lets me cheat and figure out the ones I couldn’t name (or knew I’d got wrong like Digital Ocean that I thought probably wasn’t Commodore 64).
These are really consistent, do you print them yourself?
It’s power + volume down for me, but a good top, thanks. Looks like it works even when the phone is (biometric) locked.
I rewatched all of Babylon 5 recently, and I was surprised how good season 4 and 5 were - in my head, after they’d rushed the shadow war to an early end (when they thought they were cancelled) the rest was padding, but not so.
That’s not to say there aren’t some ridiculous stories and the
telepath warspoiler
Only 116 days until Towel Day
[he wrote] a sequel to 1984.
I didn’t know this bit of his story. Anyone read it? I’m assuming it’s not very good/coherent but perhaps he was as gifted a writer as he was a coder.
Element Effects
Zodiac sign elements create elemental affinities and oppositions:
Boosted Combinations (tasks thrive under compatible elements):
- 🔥 Fire (Aries, Leo, Sagittarius) × CPU tasks: 1.5x boost
- 🌬️ Air (Gemini, Libra, Aquarius) × Network tasks: 1.5x boost
- 🌍 Earth (Taurus, Virgo, Capricorn) × System tasks: 1.4x boost
- 💧 Water (Cancer, Scorpio, Pisces) × Memory tasks: 1.3x boost
Hang on - Aquarius, the water-bearer, is an air element? I’m beginning to think this astrology stuff doesn’t make much sense.
I like that water is responsible for memory, like how homeopathic medicine works.
This is a crazy mess.
The subject of “worse reimplementations of native features” reminds me of trying to find an event for the (2012?) Olympics. They didn’t seem to have a search, but they did have an infinite scrolling schedule page so I held down End until the page had everything and used the native search. No results, even when I tried something that I knew was at the top of the page.
I noticed the scrollbar was acting weird and looked into it. Turns out that they were removing the parts of the page outside of the viewport and loading them back in when you scrolled.
I suspect it’s because they were finding their bloated page was slow on some devices so put in this terrible hack, but it broke basic browser features.
I have mixed feeling about this one. I’m on the newsletter as a Kagi + Linux user, but I’m not sure I’ll make this my daily driver once it’s ready.
I have diversified my tech, using self-hosted and/or open source where possible. Orion is closed-source, and from the same company I use for my search, translation, etc. I trust Kagi far more than I trust Google, but I still don’t want all my eggs in one basket.
It’s obviously good that we’re getting alternatives in the browser market, but I don’t know how much work they’ve done outside of the UI - is this effectively a reskin of Apple Safari in the same way we have the Chromium-based browsers that are dependent on Google’s developers?
I like that they have “native support for both Chrome and Firefox extensions”, which means I should be able to replicate my Firefox setup in Orion. I guess I’ll need to try it.
That’s really interesting, I guess I’d assumed it was a universal thing.
I know some people who are known by various versions of their names in their different circles, e.g. Robert/Bob to their family, Rob to their school friends, Bobby to their uni mates and Robert at work.
That argument only works if you’re expecting Google to move youtube.com to youtube.google, which I can’t see happening. If a brand’s a household name and can be found at brand.com, then it stands to reason that they’d leave it like that.
For Google/Microsoft budgets, domain name registration is irrelevant as a cost. Besides, even if they did move the domains, they’d still keep the old ones alive for forwarding and to stop anyone else taking them. For example, Google still has googleplus.com, despite that that was never the official address (they used a subdomain: plus.google.com).
The UK had a history of rhyming nicknames for shortened versions, like William -> Will -> Bill, and most of those are still common in English speaking countries. Richard -> Dick, Robert -> Bob (also Hob, Dob and Nob but these didn’t survive).
These shortened versions can then get extended: Edward -> Ed -> Ted -> Teddy, Margaret -> Meg -> Peg -> Peggy, Anne -> Nan -> Nancy
In the middle ages it was common to make a diminutive name by adding -kin, -in, or -cock, which gave us John -> Jankin/Jenkin -> Jakin -> Jack. Also, Robert -> Robin, Henry -> Hank
It’s very much not mesh networked, self-hosted*, or subscription-free, but there is the tin can phone which seems a really good solution for kids. To anyone looking for a project, please make an open version of this!
* the service couldn’t cope with demand over Christmas, for instance.
Equally, you can only allow *.google.com as easily as *.google, so I still don’t think that makes much sense.
You can block *.google.com as easily as *.google, so I don’t think that makes much sense.
The two most populous countries are moving in the right direction, which is good news. I really wish you guys wouldn’t insist on bringing your country into every single conversation - we know what’s happening, you don’t need to constantly remind us.








I had to laugh - that lot have absolutely no clue when it comes to security. Even in a VM I’m not sure I’d trust running Clawdbot (or whatever it’s named this week).
On a Boeing, they’re zip ties holding them together
It’s a lot quicker than reading it! It’s nearly half a million words, over if you include The Hobbit/Silmarillion.
Someone was claiming that the early chapters (I think it was the Old Forest stuff, after they left the Shire) were purposely written in a dense, slow style to make the reader really feel the weary progress. I don’t think I believe that, but it’s an interesting possibility.
I’d assume that most people are familiar with the term Trekkie, but would have to use context to figure out Trekker ("you like long walks?")
Whatever the intention, coining/identifying as a separate term suggests someone taking it quite seriously. I just consider them synonyms.
edit: FYI, this shop is OP’s shop
Found them! This lets me cheat and figure out the ones I couldn’t name (or knew I’d got wrong like Digital Ocean that I thought probably wasn’t Commodore 64).
These are really consistent, do you print them yourself?
It’s power + volume down for me, but a good top, thanks. Looks like it works even when the phone is (biometric) locked.
I rewatched all of Babylon 5 recently, and I was surprised how good season 4 and 5 were - in my head, after they’d rushed the shadow war to an early end (when they thought they were cancelled) the rest was padding, but not so.
That’s not to say there aren’t some ridiculous stories and the
should have been better but it’s definitely worth a watch.
spoiler
telepath war
Only 116 days until Towel Day
I didn’t know this bit of his story. Anyone read it? I’m assuming it’s not very good/coherent but perhaps he was as gifted a writer as he was a coder.
Hang on - Aquarius, the water-bearer, is an air element? I’m beginning to think this astrology stuff doesn’t make much sense.
I like that water is responsible for memory, like how homeopathic medicine works.
This is a crazy mess.
The subject of “worse reimplementations of native features” reminds me of trying to find an event for the (2012?) Olympics. They didn’t seem to have a search, but they did have an infinite scrolling schedule page so I held down End until the page had everything and used the native search. No results, even when I tried something that I knew was at the top of the page.
I noticed the scrollbar was acting weird and looked into it. Turns out that they were removing the parts of the page outside of the viewport and loading them back in when you scrolled.
I suspect it’s because they were finding their bloated page was slow on some devices so put in this terrible hack, but it broke basic browser features.
I have mixed feeling about this one. I’m on the newsletter as a Kagi + Linux user, but I’m not sure I’ll make this my daily driver once it’s ready.
I have diversified my tech, using self-hosted and/or open source where possible. Orion is closed-source, and from the same company I use for my search, translation, etc. I trust Kagi far more than I trust Google, but I still don’t want all my eggs in one basket.
It’s obviously good that we’re getting alternatives in the browser market, but I don’t know how much work they’ve done outside of the UI - is this effectively a reskin of Apple Safari in the same way we have the Chromium-based browsers that are dependent on Google’s developers?
I like that they have “native support for both Chrome and Firefox extensions”, which means I should be able to replicate my Firefox setup in Orion. I guess I’ll need to try it.
That’s really interesting, I guess I’d assumed it was a universal thing.
I know some people who are known by various versions of their names in their different circles, e.g. Robert/Bob to their family, Rob to their school friends, Bobby to their uni mates and Robert at work.
That argument only works if you’re expecting Google to move youtube.com to youtube.google, which I can’t see happening. If a brand’s a household name and can be found at brand.com, then it stands to reason that they’d leave it like that.
For Google/Microsoft budgets, domain name registration is irrelevant as a cost. Besides, even if they did move the domains, they’d still keep the old ones alive for forwarding and to stop anyone else taking them. For example, Google still has googleplus.com, despite that that was never the official address (they used a subdomain: plus.google.com).
The UK had a history of rhyming nicknames for shortened versions, like William -> Will -> Bill, and most of those are still common in English speaking countries. Richard -> Dick, Robert -> Bob (also Hob, Dob and Nob but these didn’t survive).
These shortened versions can then get extended: Edward -> Ed -> Ted -> Teddy, Margaret -> Meg -> Peg -> Peggy, Anne -> Nan -> Nancy
In the middle ages it was common to make a diminutive name by adding -kin, -in, or -cock, which gave us John -> Jankin/Jenkin -> Jakin -> Jack. Also, Robert -> Robin, Henry -> Hank
It’s very much not mesh networked, self-hosted*, or subscription-free, but there is the tin can phone which seems a really good solution for kids. To anyone looking for a project, please make an open version of this!
* the service couldn’t cope with demand over Christmas, for instance.
Equally, you can only allow *.google.com as easily as *.google, so I still don’t think that makes much sense.
You can block *.google.com as easily as *.google, so I don’t think that makes much sense.
The two most populous countries are moving in the right direction, which is good news. I really wish you guys wouldn’t insist on bringing your country into every single conversation - we know what’s happening, you don’t need to constantly remind us.