Jonas Hietala: Why I still blog after 15 years
  • emr emr 2w ago 100%

    Good read. I'd add one more reason: write a post to document something. Might help someone else in the future, might not, but if you ever need to refer back to it, it's going to help you!

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  • Don’t believe the hype: AGI is far from inevitable
  • emr emr 2w ago 100%

    Well it sets an upper bound on compute requirements at 'simulate 10^27 atoms for thirty years' remains to be seen if what we can optimize away ever converges with what's feasible to build.

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  • Reddit is making sitewide protests basically impossible
  • emr emr 3w ago 100%

    It would become Twitter.

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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearMI
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    PSA: LinkedIn is using your data.
  • emr emr 1mo ago 100%

    Can't wait for the bots to tell us what they learned about b2b marketing!

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  • godot
    Godot 1mo ago
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    Dev snapshot: Godot 4.4 dev 2
  • emr emr 1mo ago 100%

    I'm so hype for typed dictionaries

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  • Fandom Wiki Considered Harmful
  • emr emr 1mo ago 100%

    N64

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  • Fandom Wiki Considered Harmful
  • emr emr 1mo ago 100%
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  • Fandom Wiki Considered Harmful
  • emr emr 1mo ago 100%

    I don't think the vast majority of users use browser plugins at all. Vodoo or not, the barrier is high enough that it's not a common practice. Certainly not trivial. See the next section; I do think there's a genuine blind spot among tech literate people.

    It's kinda like if cars shocked you every time you touched the steering wheel. Car enthusiasts of course know how to pop the hood and remove the shock module, but most drivers aren't car enthusiasts. So when people have a conversation about cars, it needs to start with 'yeah shock wheels kinda suck' because that's what cars are to drivers, even if you have a workaround. If leaving the shock module in as a reminder is what it takes, so be it.

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  • Fandom Wiki Considered Harmful
  • emr emr 1mo ago 100%

    Are we not even going to talk about how many of their sites/wikis are filled with fake/misinformation and go to great lengths to document completely non-existent things in a way that isn’t always obvious to outsiders?

    I don't know how specific that is to Fandom but I am aware of at least one Fandom Wiki for an obscure old console game that's like 50% inexplicable unmarked fanfiction.

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  • Hachette v. Internet Archive is out: 2nd Circuit rejects controlled digital lending theory; IA's use is not transformative; all four fair use factors favor the publishers
  • emr emr 2mo ago 100%

    I agree strongly with your gut reaction. I personally use it as the archive of record whenever I digitize some media that would otherwise be lost. I use it when trying to establish how something looked in the past. I don't need IA to go out and pick losing fights with publishers at the expense of the excellent services they already provide.

    It should be noted that if you want digital book loans Libby is fine.

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  • "Lunduke is the worst Linux Desktop Environment of all time"
  • emr emr 2mo ago 100%

    I guess what I'm trying to say is that his contrarian personal views and his contrarian technical views are both expressions of some underlying contrarian-ness. Not that we shouldn't be asking if he's a decent person, just that I'm not super surprised to find out he's gone mask off weirdo.

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  • "Lunduke is the worst Linux Desktop Environment of all time"
  • emr emr 2mo ago 100%

    I lost all respect for his technical taste when he confessed that his daily driver is FreeDOS. I know linux folks skew at least a little contrarian but at that point I don't think we're speaking the same language of computing and there's not much I can learn from ya. Not super surprised to hear he went way overboard contrarian in other ways I guess.

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  • What's the oldest game anyone here has played in 2024?
  • emr emr 2mo ago 100%

    N64 runs ok on pi? Since when? Which PI?

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  • Finding And Resurrecting Archie: The Internet’s First Search Engine
  • emr emr 5mo ago 100%

    When I search for stuff I don't seem to get anything.

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  • linux
    Linux 6mo ago
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    Samba vs NFS vs SSHFS ?
  • emr emr 6mo ago 100%

    The nice thing about Samba is that you can find clients for everything.

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  • Dell Called It "The Showstopper" - The Dell XPS M2010, a last hurrah of the luggable PC.
  • emr emr 6mo ago 100%

    I'm trying to picture how the other room music is supposed to work. Are you cranking the volume on your TV speakers loud enough to hear in the other toom, or using the PC to control an extra set or far away speakers, or did people used to wire their houses with everywhere speakers controlled from a single receiver?

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  • Dell Called It "The Showstopper" - The Dell XPS M2010, a last hurrah of the luggable PC.
  • emr emr 6mo ago 100%

    Great video. Haven't finished it yet, but did he ever explain why you'd want your media center to be luggable? I feel like if they'd ditched the screen and keyboard they would have something better than a modern streaming box except in 2006, but maybe they sold something like that too.

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  • books
    Books 12mo ago
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    *Permanently Deleted*
  • emr emr 11mo ago 100%

    I really like nonfiction, so I'll recommend a few.

    Wonderful Life (Stephen Jay Gould) was what really helped me understand biology. Really interesting read if you want to hear about evolution or paleontology. If you prefer land animals to Cambrian bugs, Rise and Fall of dinosaurs (Steve Brusatte) is also a great read, though it didn't blow my mind as much as Gould did.

    House and Soul of a new Machine (both by Tracy Kidder) are op opposite ends of the technical spectrum but together form a rich portrait of people at work.

    Exploding The Phone (Phil Lapsely) is the book you want if you're at all interested in retro technology. I suspect many people who care enough to use a ln offbeat social network like this one will enjoy it.

    Annals of the former world (John McPhee) is a hefty tome that tells the natural history of United States geology, the history of geology (especially how plate tectonics were discovered) and how geology has interacted with the people living on it.

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  • linux
    Linux 11mo ago
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    What happens when Linus dies/retires?
  • emr emr 11mo ago 100%

    So like systemd but ten times more dramatic.

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  • books
    Books 12mo ago
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    Do you buy books you have already read?
  • emr emr 12mo ago 100%

    Only very occasionally. Masters of Doom and Ubik are examples. I like being able to hand copies of books to friends and family to borrow and I can't do that with an ebook.

    I tell myself I will reread some books, but I can't imagine ever really doing that. Maybe when my brain is less plastic some day.

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  • I figured some teleco geniuses out here, so I figured I might give it a shot. The house I grew up in is looking to get rid of it's landline, and thus it's phone number. This phone number is one of the small number I actually have memorized-making it super useful, because I am unlikely to memorize any additional numbers in my lifetime, and certainly no numbers will ever have the same nostalgic ring to them. They're a different phone carrier, and a different state. The current owner would be happy to hand the number over. Is this type of transfer in the realm of possibility?

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    Would the perfect title for the blog post I hope exists somewhere. I, like a few other posters, just grabbed one of these things. I also took the step of reading through a good chunk of *Ham Radio For Dummies* just to get a handle on the basics. * What can I (legally) do with this thing without a license? * Any pointers for learning the basics on this particular machine? * I should read the manual cover to cover, right? * Looks like it's easier to program from a computer, any tips on that?

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