Doesn't your local DNS has to reach out to another DNS to query yet unknown addresses, causing an infinite loop as it's now told to reach out to itself?
Good thing there isn't a filter for "has working voice channels that aren't a hot mess", the list would be immediately and fully empty. With the exception of Mumble perhaps, but that one instead doesn't have any text channels or community features.
Came across this on the r/selfhosted community. Still very much in the alpha stages, but it's already got a Docker image you can try out for yourself, or try out the demo server. ...
The "experimental" voice rooms are total trash, settings are not working (e.g. auto-gain can't be disabled)
The Calls via Jitsi somehow have a worse UX than Skype had in its worst days
The verification via emojis uses different emoji styles, missing the point completely
Due to the session mess "Can't decrypt message" will be your best friend
Even if you got a verified session it sometimes fails to decrypt a message
The federation is SLOW. As in "wait many many minutes" slow.
The whole Spaces-with-detached-rooms concept is a mess
There're no proper moderation tools
There isn't even a god damn admin panel! For the longest time you had to MANUALLY CURL THE API. Even today you have to mess with third-party admin panels that usually don't have all options exposed
Encryption is nice, but Matrix leaking tons of metadata isn't.
They effectively stopped developing the Element client in favour of Element X, which isn't available in desktop. And also loves to break during verification.
Third-party clients sometimes work better, but certainly don't expect anything but text chats with pictures there.
I really tried to like it, I even attempted to move a community over, attempted to self-host, all the jazz. It's a steaming mess for years now with no end in sight, and literally everyone who tried it eventually left disenchanted. Don't even bother trying it.
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then cleaned it off hoping that we wouldn't remember that they still had it
They said nah, let's just forget about it.
Except Germany has a rather unique culture of remembrance about it. I'll never forget the school trip to the Bergen-Belsen memorial site, that historical video where they used shovel loaders to push hundreds of corpses in mass graves which we just stood in front of is permanently engraved in my head.
This culture is one of the reasons US Jews who once fled from Germany, or their descendants, are now increasingly getting out of the US and regain german citizenship through Article 116 of our constitution with a simple letter to the Embassy (usually followed by an apology letter including an invitation from said Embassy). It's quite the irony.
Can't work the same way though. By now trans is pretty well explainable given all the evidence of how brain structure differs between e.g. cis women trans men (i.e. trans men's brains do show male characteristics connected to the male human phenotype). Even though we need a really big study yet (the evidence fromes from three small ones) the trail is there. So our mind probably tries to make sense of the signals those "lower-level" brain functions emit, very angrily so when they're presented with hormones they're not made for.
Hence for otherkin it got to be quite different. We still don't know anything (like, more than a few %) about the nature of identity and "self" yet given it's an emergent property, that's why I ended up with "furry spirituality" as it made most sense to me.
I don't think Non-Binary is a weird spot or anything. To my knowledge the whole brain structure thingy is on a spectrum anyway (I mean, makes most sense, doesn't it? Any sex trait can be somewhere inbetween), and then there's how every individual interprets what their mind and their environment tells them. The whole societal gender idea sucks anyway.
Phantom pains are just awful… for the brain emotional and physical pain is the same anyway, it gets treated the very same way. Extreme pain about it will eventually get experienced in the way it makes most sense to you, so if you feel there should be something and you're in constant pain it's missing eventually your brain will elevate the pain into your conscious the way it makes most sense to you. 😟
Sorry if this sounds cold to anyone, it's just my way to make heads or tails of it.
My dopamine-defficient corners of the brain would like to have a word with you. And everyone else reading this. Oh look, a butterfly! I'm tired. Like a tire. Weeeh! dozes off 😴
Puritans on Linux are a real menace. Every time someone calls an OS install image of 3-4gb "bloated" I want to scream uncontrollably. Not statically linking stuff is part of this cultural issue.
Flatpak might solves these issues in the long run. Of course the same people therefore hate it, because it's "bloated" and "convoluted".
<rant>
How dare we have different versions of the same lib! Where will we end up, like MS Windows? Where I can boot up apps as old as myself? Outrageous! Not my precious mibibytes!).
</rant>
This shit is the exact reason Linux doesn't just have ridiculously bad backwards compatibility but has also alienated literally everyone who isn't a developer, and why the most stable ABI on Linux is god damn Win32 through Wine. Hell, for the same reason fundamentally important things like accessibility tools keep breaking, something where the only correct answer to is this blogpost. FOSS is awesome and all, but not if it demands from you to become a developer and continuesly invest hundreds of hours just so things won't break. We should be able to habe both, free software AND good compatibility.
What you describe is in no way a strength, it's Linux' core problem. Something we have to overcome ASAP.
Fortunately we do have a steady influx of new people incl. those who demand shit to god damn work, finally shifting this notion.
For the time being we still have to resort to using the Windows version and Wine for old software though… But I already had the situation where the (unmaintained but working) app also had a Flatpak which was last updated many years ago and it just worked, which made me incredibly happy and hopeful. ❤️
Good thing there's a battle-proven response if people don't like this because it's "not what Linux is supposed to be" or some other nonsense: If you don't like it just fork it yourself. 😚
This might be the most awful Linuxbro take I've read this year, congratulations. Linux has to lack a stable ABI to keep the capitalists away and make apps constantly require maintenance to filter out bad behaviour? Just wow.
I really hope for way more people to come over so nonsense like this finally stops.
And that fight against closed-source and anti-consumer shit is awesome, but that changes absolutely nothing about Linux being completely awful in terms of long-term support. Running old software is a whole project (for enthusiasts) in itself almost every single time, meanwhile I can run almost any decade-old software on systems like Android or Windows simply by installing it without having to be an IT professional.
that literally nobody including little timmy who's 14 and just submitted his first PHP patch has a problem with."
Except that this causes usability issues for the 99.99% of users who aren't that little Timmy you just made up, and it causes accessibility tools which are freaking essential for many people to simply break. Old games becoming unplayable isn't an issue only because of their Windows versions and Wine, dxvk etc - we literally have to fall back to Windows software to keep software running because of how badly the Linux system architecture works for desktop usage. What a disgrace.
if we had the right to repair their software we wouldn't have this problem in the first place because someone else would have already fixed it.
Literally has nothing to do with Linux' own problems.
What the hell is going on in this thread? Linux has been being actively developed by people who want "shit to god damn work" forever.
Yes and no. Yes as in "you can fix it" (if you're a programmer), but no in terms of "everything is set up so binaries will still run in 20 years as-is". Dependency hell, missing library versions, binaries being linked against old glibc versions you can't provide… all of these are known issues, and devs are often being discouraged from compiling tools in a way that makes them work forever (since that makes the app bigger and potentially consume more memory). And better don't tell someone who's blind (and used Linux before) what's quoted above, they'll either laugh at you or get really angry. It's also one of the reasons I'm angry (I'm able to see, but I hate this hypocrisy in the community). Linux on desktop utterly alienated disabled people, simply because stuff like screenreaders keep breaking.
That's a rabbit hole of semantics I'm not going down. 😅 I think it's clear we are talking about Desktop Linux, which is very different to Android.
What was the last completely unmaintained binary that you pulled on Windows and ran (with no tweaking) and the last one that failed on Linux?
Ouff, didn't use Windows (10) for years. Probably either Photoshop CS6 or one of my old favs like Total Annihilation (1998). On Linux the last app that failed also happened to be a (native) game, Life is Strange: Before the Storm. I saw someone fixed it with a glibc shim, and a friend likes that game.
Why do you keep sharing that link instead of this one?
Because I'm complaining about puritans and Linux-bros who keep sugarcoating real problems that exist for a long time now, or even still make a fuss about things like systemd or Flatpak (which solve a lot of long lasting issues). That blogpost is a perfect example of this. I said it in my first comment, "Puritans on Linux are a real menace". Everything after that is merely me putting my finger into open wounds (which are being worked on by devs and I'm absolutely celebrating that, please don't get me wrong!) which are regularly being sugarcoated by those people.
Have you considered joining the community and working with it – like the author of the blog that you keep sharing – instead of trying to insult every one who works on it and calling it a disgrace?
It wasn't my intention to insult any dev working in these issues, if it sounds like that I'm genuinely sorry. I'm mad about puritans who behave as if Desktop Linux is a silver bullet for long-term app support or people like Semperservus who think it's a good thing non-devs (and those who simply don't have time to invest that time into their computer) are being "filtered out". And if someone sugarcoats big issues like how Linux systems historically handled packages and dependencies and the problems it causes I'll use strong words to make abundantly clear how wrong they are, because I'm fed up by this willful ignorance.
(Same willful ignorance in my opinion is the reason why accessibility deteriorated to the current degree since we once had that part figured out. That's why I used is as argument)
Running 20 year old binaries is not the primary use case and it is very manageable if you actually want to do that. I’ve been amazed at some completely ancient programs that I’ve been able to run, but I don’t see any reason a 20 year old binary should “just work”, that kind of support is a bit silly. Instead maybe we should encourage abandonware to not be abandonware? If you’re not going to support your project, and that project is important to people, provide the source. I don’t blame the Linux developers for that kind of thing at all.
I see your point. What I think though is that it's particularly hard on Linux to fix programs, especially if you are not a developer (which is always the perspective I try to see things from). Most notable architectural difference here between f.e. Windows and Linux would be how you're able to simply throw a library into the same folder as the executable on Windows for it to use it (an action every common user can do and fully understand). On Linux you hypothetically can work with LD_PRELOAD, but (assuming someone already wrote a tutorial and points to the file for you to grab) even that already requires more knowledge about some system concepts.
Of course software not becoming abandonware would be best, but that's not really something we can expect to happen. Even if Europe would make the absolutely banger move and enforce open-sourcing upon abandonment of software after a few years, it would still require a developer to fix issues. The architecture of the OS should be set up so it's as easy as possible to make something run, using concepts (like file management) as many people as possible are familiar with.
devs are often being discouraged from compiling tools in a way that makes them work forever (since that makes the app bigger and potentially consume more memory)
This is simply not true.
We might be in different bubbles in this case. Please be aware I'm talking about the very loud toxic minority (hopefully it's a minority…) who constantly shit about how things aren't following "KISS" close enough, that your app or distro is bloated, etc. It feels like if I was collecting all statements against Flatpak, systemd, even just static linking that boil down to "it's bloated! It's not KISS! Bad!" (so not well-reasoned criticism) I read or hear, including around my local hackspace or on events, I could fill whole books.
Linux desktop isn’t actively working against disabled people, don’t be obtuse.
Not actively, no. The issue here is rather that, for way too long, we didn't care enough. We had things working comparatively nicely one or two decades ago, but in more recent history the support deteriorated to such a degree the Linux desktop has become, to a huge degree, inaccessible to blind people (mostly due to issues with Wayland). I didn't save those blogposts or statements to show in discussions like these, but the takeaway from all of them is that "It used to work for me many years ago, but if I want a system that respects me today I'm forced to use Mac". But of course you're also right, it's slowly getting better!
(Correct me if I'm wrong, not a native speaker: "being alienated" doesn't inherently imply malicious intent of doing so, does it?)
But this idea that “finally we have people that want Linux to work” is infuriating. Do you have any idea how much of an uphill battle it has been to just get WiFi working on Linux? That isn’t because the volunteer community is lazy and doesn’t want things to work: that’s because literally every company is hostile to the open source community to the point of sometimes deliberately changing things just to screw us over. The entitlement in that statement is truly infuriating.
Sorry, I was really pissed off yesterday evening by earlier comments in the chain implying it's good to "filter out people" and got carried away. This one is completely on me.
I think it's slowly getting better though, more people are finally listening. At least that's what I notice; still, those purists who don't give a proper shit ("The CLI is perfectly accessible! It's all text, where's the problem?") and believe everyone got to be a developer or filtered out are really loud and annoying.
Of course the system should inherently be accessible. Better backwards compatibility would just make a lot of things simpler, even if what's being made simpler is to deal with bad decisions and exclusion. Enabling people (everyone, not just abled or developers) is always good.
I'm trying to find the reason why my bigger printer suddenly decided to constantly create blockages as high as the PTFE tube in the cooling block (so a little bit above the heatbreak). ...
Good advice. I always wait until below 50°C hotend temp before I shutdown the machines. The issues I currently have also happen mid-print (after perhaps 5-10 minutes).
Screenshot from the MusicBrainz documentation, which reads: You'll also see a "Guess Case" section. This will try to make the titles align more closely to our guidelines. [...] Note that this guessing won't always be perfect even for English, [...] If the titles are German, it's better not to even try, as the Guess Case can't deal with the German capitalisation style at all.
A lesbian with the hammer and sickle on her top sees a girl with an anarchist symbol on hers and says "I can fix her!". One month later you see both girls again but this time the one with the hammer and sickle top is wearing an anarchist top instead as she says "Bruh."
Yeah, it's really appaling… I see this around my hackerspace and on events all the time as well. I don't get how people can look at history and be like "oh damn, that symbol shows exactly what I like: worker's unionizing!". Discussions usually won't lead anywhere though, way too often they'll either tangle you up in never-ending theories and hypotheticals from the last century (which never worked) until you resign and they feel victorious or excuse even the most abhorrent individuals, let it be Guevara or even Mao.
At least online you're able to quickly block people…
I chose the Fairphone for the repairability and increased openness, but it's also 2 to 3 times the price of a more common brand cellphone
Only outside of Europe or their free-trade partners, in Europe I can get a Gen 5 for 400€ and Gen 6 for about 550€. It's extremely annoying for most countries, but regarding the US it's 100% their regime's fault for not having any comparable company (they get immediately smushed by Google, Apple & Co by any means necessary) or at least low / no tariffs with the EU zone (Trump literally killed a done deal in this regard one week before ratification with his threats of invading Greenland).
For instance, my laptop is a MNT Reform: it's a very good laptop, but it's literally 6 times the price of a comparatively-specced laptop from a big-box store.
Now that's really special. :D There are a lot of "normal" (x86) devices on the market that are way more affordable as well. For a while Slimbook offered a modern native Linux laptop for <500€, and there are also companies like System76 (US), NovaCustom (NL) or Star Labs (UK) with laptops running on open firmware that come with less restrictions and powerful hardware.
For people who aren't (yet) poor it's mostly a problem of discoverability and lack of knowledge not to go with the more sane products. We get bombarded with ads promising the best experience on the usual platforms (that are as manipulative as possible). BambuLab also plays this game perfectly, their influencer marketing paired with VC-funded undercutting prices are top notch in getting people locked into their garbage.
On a positive note: You become the person to ask if anything problematic happens. Like, the moment someone feels sick it's always me who got the travel-amount of medicine ready (Ibuprofen, Talcid, Vomex and such).
What's the alternative closest to the completeness of Instander at the moment? I have been using the last version of Instander still supporting v7a which is v16.0 for many years now and as it seems there is a chance it will finally stop working soon.
Okay. ( lemmy.blahaj.zone )
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what a coincidence
I am having a problem with pihole and mullvad
Hello ...
Vaultwarden security update Feb 10 2026 ( github.com )
GHSA-h265-g7rm-h337 (Publication in process, waiting for CVE assignment) ...
big list of selfhosted chat apps to meet all your friends on a real "server" ( slfh.st )
Sharkord - an open-source self-hostable Discord alternative with voice, video, and real-time messaging. ( sharkord.com )
Came across this on the r/selfhosted community. Still very much in the alpha stages, but it's already got a Docker image you can try out for yourself, or try out the demo server. ...
Everywhere...
Source ...
GitHub - spacebarchat/spacebarchat: 📬 Spacebar is a free open source selfhostable discord compatible communication platform ( github.com )
Has anyone tried this? It's discord reverse engineered.
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The (rule) realisation
Therians Rule
Interview with a ‘Just use a VPS’ bro (OpenClaw version) ( youtu.be )
Guess who wasn't in the Epstein files...
The latter
No comment
🪿
Can mere dirt cause heatcreep?
I'm trying to find the reason why my bigger printer suddenly decided to constantly create blockages as high as the PTFE tube in the cooling block (so a little bit above the heatbreak). ...
Groomed
rule
https://comp.lain.la/objects/454fb83e-645e-4fb6-9ec2-3fdb7742df5d
MusicBrulez
I can rule her
Moms and Dads
Washington wants your 3D printer to spy on you - here's the bill ( www.youtube.com )
consumerrights.wiki/w/Washington_house_bill_2321_regarding_3d_printers ...
Please please please
Utopia
What do you call this kind of business decision?
Brand new bag
Instander will stop working..
What's the alternative closest to the completeness of Instander at the moment? I have been using the last version of Instander still supporting v7a which is v16.0 for many years now and as it seems there is a chance it will finally stop working soon.