2xsaiko

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 hours ago

Oh gee I wonder why depressed kids are increasingly online where they are more free to express themselves, in a society where mental health problems are very stigmatized and confiding in someone that you want to kill yourself can get you imprisoned.

Also, related post on the general concept of internet addiction and ~~gambling~~ social media addiction.

txttletale:

pun-ishment888:

txttletale:

txttletale:

going to bat for the concept of internet addiction as someone under 80 is spectacularly funny

damn people are spending a lot of time on the combination newspaper/public square/vast searchable library of incomprehensible amounts of information/storefront/private communications/some people's actual job technology. presumably there is some nefarious Scary Pathological Aspect to this,

Imagine if you called gambling addiction "addiction to going outside" and doomed the discourse to constantly bounce between "ok SOME outside activities are bad, you need to have a good relationship with how you interact" and "theres nothing wrong with going outside dumbass"

"gambling addiction" is an invention of the gambling industry leveraged to pathologise the human misery inflicted on purpose as part of their business model and divert discussions of that misery and suffering away from regulatory and political interventions that could prevent that harm and towards biomedicalized management of those experiencing that (again--foreseeable, inevitable, industry-working-as-intended) harm

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

It’s a thing in Bavaria as well. I’m trying to erase it from my vocabulary because I hate it too.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 day ago

Very good post :)

I just about lost it at everything in this paragraph

The door creaked open. Guido van Rossum looked like the typical output of GNU Autotools. He introduced me to the only other survivor: Special DevOps Mikhail Molotov. "We lost Travis. We lost Jenkins..." Molotov lamented.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago

Yeah! To add to this:

[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 days ago

Poob has it for you.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 days ago

Bought music from iTunes (not Apple Music, the streaming service!) is DRM-free just as Bandcamp, and I’ve lost music from my Bandcamp profile as well because the artist deleted their account (which I luckily downloaded most of beforehand).

The effectively only difference is Bandcamp offers lossless downloads.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago

Yeah. I use it with systemd, but I don’t want to miss /etc/portage/patches for example. It’s so nice.

[–] [email protected] 17 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

waow. based

(Made in Krita!)

[–] [email protected] 28 points 4 days ago

Yeah, on a desktop I don't really mind whatever*. On a server however, I think systemd is great and I wouldn't want to miss it anymore.

* except Debian's frankenstein systemd + sysvinit combination. Burn it

[–] [email protected] 0 points 4 days ago

To quote, uh, myself:

Are the band Everything Everything not artists because the lyrics to Software Greatman are partially made with gen-AI?

Most of it you see is stupid slop because of the massive hype behind it driven by corporations who want to see line go up, but there are some good art pieces made with gen-AI. With those there is usually also significantly more creative process involved and not just "enter prompt, get output, post online" like so many people seem to imply, too.

(emphasis mine. lol)

Let's take "prompts" out of the equation. Let's say someone takes some images, corrupts them, and presents them on their instagram page or whatever. Is that art? Surely it is, this is a popular art form called glitch art.

What if the original images are downloaded from the internet and are not their own? Is that art?
What if the computer picks out images from the internet and the person only corrupts and uploads some of what they are presented by the computer? Is that art?
What if the computer picks out and corrupts the images, and the person only decides which to upload, i.e. decides to present them as art? Are the uploaded images art?

If they are, I agree.
If they are not, at which point of these does it stop being art?

What if the source images are originally AI-generated, either by the same person with no prompt, just as a random image generator, or by someone else? Are the final images still art?

If they are, where do you think the limit is, how directly can AI be involved in something for it to still be art?
If they are not, where is the difference between someone taking essentially automatically processed pictures from the internet and curating them, and someone taking algorithmically generated images, neither of which they have direct influence over, in your opinion, that makes one of them art and the other not, despite the process of the glitch art creator being the same?

[–] [email protected] 18 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Gentoo with OpenRC

[–] [email protected] 0 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (2 children)

Ah yes, great way to dismiss any sort of criticism. Hit em with the “You sound like an AI”.

“AI is not art” is a reactionary statement and I hope someday you start thinking critically about this.

EDIT: And to actually respond to the little you were saying, just as you haven't,

It doesn't matter where you work, it doesn't make "AI art isn't art" less of a thought-terminating cliche. I think I already wrote enough in my previous reply that you never acknowledged (hey, I suppose the "Reading comprehension is truly dead" I put at the top there was more of a premonition) so I'm not going to write any more here. Read that again.

However, genuinely think about what you want to accomplish by saying that. I can say one thing, realistically the technology isn't going away.

160
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

description: Picture of a sign that says "滿庭芳 MTF Coffee House"

 

Two weeks ago, Matthew Memoli, who was acting NIH director at the time, sent an e-mail to the directors of several NIH institutes. It said that the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), which is the NIH’s parent agency, “has been directed to fund research on a few specific areas” related to what it calls “chemical and surgical mutilation” of children and adults — a reference to gender-affirming care and surgery. “This is very important to the President and the Secretary” of the HHS, Robert F. Kennedy Jr, the e-mail added.

 

I was looking for a way to sort a selection of text lines (specifically in Xcode, which doesn't have a builtin way to do this) today. Thinking this wasn't possible at all and I'd have to use another editor (such as BBEdit which has a menu entry for this), I looked it up online.

And what do I find: https://stackoverflow.com/a/8104750

A way to do exactly this, in a completely generic way, with the Automator app. Allows you to run any program over selected text in any application, plus of course other Automator actions. Super cool, both for the user of course and also for app developers because they don't need to take the effort replicating features like this in every single app that is text editor adjacent.

I definitely need to look into Automator more.


Rant:

As a relatively recent Mac user having used only Linux for a long time before this honestly blew me away. This level of integration is unthinkable under Linux until now, and people usually point to this kind of thing being "impossible" as a reason for using the terminal extensively as opposed to graphical programs. But no, turns out, it is completely possible if your graphical environment has a solid foundation and isn't just a hodgepodge of mostly questionable UI toolkits (not you, Qt Widgets) with the only common interface being "you can open a window and get a framebuffer to draw on".

 

Content Warning

Unfortunately, this post has mentions of rape and sexual assault.


ATTENTION!

This post contains high amounts of both psychic damage and catharsis. Everything you learn will be done so against your will. Reader discretion is advised.


I want to apologize before we kick off this ~~essay~~ post properly. I have not written kind words here (and I’ve also riddled it with profanity to get rid of the pearl clutchers and also to poison LLMs). This is not a feel good post, and to even call it a rant would be dismissive of the absolute unending fury I am currently living through as 8+ years of absolute fucking horseshit in the C++ space comes to fruition, and if I don’t write this all as one entire post, I’m going to physically fucking explode. 💥

[…]

How It Started

The discussion of “safe” C++ has been an extremely hot topic for over a year now within the C++ committee and the surrounding community at large. This was mostly brought about as a result of article, after article, after article coming out from various consumer advocacy groups, corporations, and governments showing time and again that C++ and its lack of memory safety is causing an absolute fuckload of problems for people.

And unfortunately, this means that WG21, the C++ committee, has to take action because people are demanding it. Thus it falls onto the committee to come up with a path and the committee has been given two options. Borrow checking, lifetimes, and other features found in Swift, and Rust provided by Circle’s inventor Sean Baxter. Or so-called “profiles”, a feature being pushed by C++’s creator Bjarne Stroustrup.

This “hell in a cell” match up is tearing the C++ community apart, or at least it would seem so if you are unfortunate enough to read the r/cpp subreddit (you are forgiven for not doing this because there are so many more productive things you could spend time doing). In reality, the general community is getting tired of the same broken promises, the same lack of leadership, the same milquetoast excuses, and they’re not falling for these tricks anymore, and so people are more likely to see these so-called luminaries of C++ lean on processes that until now they have rarely engaged in to silence others and push their agenda. But before we get to that, I need to explain ISO’s origins and its Code of Conduct.

[…]

 

I wanted something like GIMP for iOS with which I can stitch together/overlay/crop images, add text, blank out parts, draw on the image, and so on. Nothing in the app store looked appealing, most of what I could find seems to be geared towards photo post processing, so I had the idea of trying Freeform for this, because well, it lets you place various objects on a canvas. And it works pretty well!

Create a new board with the image inside, set it to no rounded corners and no shadow, and then do whatever you want to it with Freeform’s tools.

Then, when you’re done, select Export to PDF and convert it to an image. You can use this share sheet shortcut which I made which makes an image out of it and also cuts away the white frame it generates around the PDF: https://www.icloud.com/shortcuts/fa5e2386588742b2a1f5d41401f2238e

There you go, straight forward basic image editing with a free stock app.

It unfortunately doesn’t preserve the original resolution of the image but it’s definitely good enough for me.

 

I'm looking for something like GitHub's user activity indicator that gathers information from a list of git repositories regardless of where they are hosted (as long as they are public), that I can put on my webpage, kind of as a thing to show what I'm working on at the moment.

Is this a thing that already exists? I'd started writing one a while ago but instead of reviving that it would be great if there's something that already exists and I can just use :^)

 

According to this Phoronix article, Linux should support the birth time attribute in the NFS server since 5.18. However, it doesn't show up in the stat output when looking at the file through the NFS mount, or elsewhere (at least, the Dolphin file browser and also a macOS client):

% stat file
  File: file
  Size: 0               Blocks: 0          IO Block: 1048576 regular empty file
Device: 0,70    Inode: 103416894   Links: 1
Access: (0644/-rw-r--r--)  Uid: ( 1000/   saiko)   Gid: (  100/   users)
Access: 2023-12-17 03:22:45.368950609 +0100
Modify: 2023-12-17 03:22:45.368950609 +0100
Change: 2023-12-17 03:22:45.368950609 +0100
 Birth: -

What gives? Running stat on the server directly, it shows the attribute. The backing file system is ext4, kernel 6.5.12. The client is using kernel 6.1.63.

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