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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/)RE
Posts 57
Comments 493
Wait, my body's own heat is enough? Always has been.
  • I just have a pair of hiking boots that I wear indoors. I have them laced up very loose so that I can just pull them on without undoing the laces, almost like slippers. They're very warm and comfy.

  • Wait, my body's own heat is enough? Always has been.
  • I mean that's just the theoretical power from adding up all of the PSU ratings. Actual power is less, since it's just the video cards working, optimized for hashes per watt (i.e. not maximum power), and most of the time it would be two or one computer running, since the others would be away from their desk or playing games or doing something important

  • Wait, my body's own heat is enough? Always has been.
  • My old housemates were the opposite lol. We tried saving every penny on heating costs. In the winter, we taped the windows over with cardboard for better insulation (they are old single-pane windows), and fashioned an automatic door closer from an elastic cord to keep the door into the living room shut (our "warm zone"). Instead of using gas heating, we mined ETH with our gaming PC's (this was before ethereum went proof-of-stake). Between the three of us, the total energy output was close to 2kW, so totally viable for keeping the living room warm. Pretty sure we ended up earning money from heating the house lol.

  • Wait, my body's own heat is enough? Always has been.
  • Figure out a system to prevent overuse

    If we're going down the "government should pay for it" route, then a good solution would be subsidizing thermal insulation. It's a big investment upfront, but will save a lot of money for both homeowners and the government in the future. Not to mention the obvious ecological benefits.

  • Wait, my body's own heat is enough? Always has been.

    239
    All of modern desktop software
  • I still can't fathom why electron needs to exist when PWA is a thing. Like, almost every app is just plain better running in a normal web browser instead of electron. Webapps never need to be updated manually, electron apps do (e.g. discord). Webapps are sandboxed inside the browser, electron has you running some rando developer's code natively. With electron, you have to trust the developers of every app to keep the electron version up-to-date to avoid critical bugs (e.g. libwebp). With webapps, if your browser is patched, then every webapp is safe. Electron also suffers from random bugs and regressions that aren't an issue in most web browsers.

  • Thanks for the warning I guess??

    78
    Snap...
  • If you're interested in another approach to containerizing GUI applications, also checkout out x11docker. It's a small independent project maintained by one guy, nothing big like flatpak, but also pretty cool. The name is actually a bit limiting -- it supports both docker and podman, and can run wayland apps as well. One of the coolest features, in my opinion, is the ability to run a separate X server inside every sandbox and forward individual windows to the "host" X server. That way you can prevent apps from spying on your keyboard or other apps' windows.

  • Snap...
  • The thing with appimages is that they expect the developer to have full knowledge of what libraries need to be bundled with their app, which makes it difficult to make truly universal appimages. In flatpak you just select one of a set list of runtimes and add any additional dependencies on top of it. Flatpak also re-uses the files for each runtime in between the different apps that use it, which saves a lot of disk space.

  • Snap...
  • Why not containerise everything? You need libreoffice? No problem, here is a docker or podman container.

    Flatpak is basically GUI-optimized containers. It uses the same technology (namespaces) as docker and podman, just with some extra tools to make GUI-related things work properly. That's why flatpak apps don't use the system's gtk version -- they're running in a sandbox with a different rootfs. You can spawn a shell into the sandbox of a specific app with flatpak run --command=sh com.yourapp.YourApp and poke around it if you want to.

  • Snap...
  • Oh, what the fuck!?

    TBH I wouldn't mind it that much. The whole point of flatpak is that the developer can do whatever demented satanic rituals they want inside of the sandbox, and it won't contaminate the rest of the system.

  • And guess what, that works.
  • It's the three strategies of pricing:

    • Price the item as XX.99 to make it feel cheaper than it is
    • Price the item as a whole/round number to make it feel premium
    • Price the item as a seemingly random number like XX.57 to get ahead of the shopper who are weary of the first two tactics
  • Corporations are not your Friends: A Story in Two Parts

    Screenshot sources:

    • <https://lemmy.world/post/21863843?scrollToComments=true>
    • <https://lemmy.sdf.org/comment/4997189>
    161

    Federated social media from before it was cool

    It's funny when armchair experts insist that the fediverse won't catch on because "federation is too hard to understand" when arguably the most widespread communication system on the internet follows the same model

    102

    Federated social media from before it was cool

    6

    I'm going insane

    61

    I have the weirdest aesthetic preferences

    110

    Me giving advice about text editors

    186

    Average systemd debate

    132

    Adblockers will stop working any minute now...

    68

    M*crosoft's search engine is borderline unusable

    It's impressive how duckduckgo manages to be so much better than bing despite being a frontend for bing

    272

    AI's take on XML

    7

    AI's take on XML

    140

    Is "disk" just a different spelling of "disc" or are they actually different words?

    I heard some people say theyre the same thing, but others are adamant that they have different meanings. Which is it?

    149

    If buying it isn't owning it...

    70

    Many such cases

    68

    So that's where the GO logo comes from!

    3

    So that's where the GO logo comes from!

    7

    Who knew Unicode was so versatile?

    23

    Somehow USB disks are still the easiest and most reliable way

    287