

lvra.gitlab.io is a great source of info for vr on linux. The discord server you mentioned is also bridged to Matrix for those who don’t want to use discord.


lvra.gitlab.io is a great source of info for vr on linux. The discord server you mentioned is also bridged to Matrix for those who don’t want to use discord.


Malware. All the malware 🪲. That thing better be airgapped.
Also on Peertube veronicaexplains@tinkerbetter.tube


I have 1 time where my alarm goes off, but I use 2 physical alarm clocks: My phone and an old 90s digital alarm clock. The phone is mostly just as a backup in case of a power outage or something.
That seems like a small price to pay to have a dark magician girl decal in people’s faces in bumper to bumper traffic lol.


There’s plenty of good, open source UX in FOSS. Have you seen the Gnome family of apps? They look great and are easy to understand.


This is exactly what I do too. I started half a year ago and have no regrets yet.
I’m not completely sure, but doesn’t Bitwarden encrypt all data before it reaches the server? That means the server implementation is a bit less important. I guess you probably don’t want to be leaking even encrypted databases though since there is a chance they could be cracked.
Don’t worry. They can send the reports to /dev/null where they will be read by Tim Apple himself when he checks it.


Might as well try it out. The quality of the maps also varies from city to city, so you might have a different experience compared to others. I find I’m able to get around reliably around my city on my bike.


In Canada, we have Via rail. They line you up like you’re at an airport and check your ticket before you board the train, and also check your ticket once you’re on the train. They also have enforced weight restrictions on baggage. The trains share tracks with freight, meaning that the train has to stop every once in a while to let a freight train pass. All this to take longer than driving and cost alot as well.


Still better than Canadian rail. That shit is regularly late. Significantly late.
I switched my server from Ubuntu to Fedora, partly so I don’t get sold Ubuntu pro on every login lol.


I guess the cost is worth it to Google just to entrench themselves and their products even further into the lives of most people.


This is literally me, except I left a comment here earlier today and when I saw the thread for a second time when looking at a reply, I also thought it was about Proton alla Wine.
I use Discord, though only in a web browser and only for semi-public chats. I might be using Discord less if I had gotten some friend groups onto something like Matrix.


Unlike a car which is bought once and is mostly outside of vendor control once you have it, Proton mail is a service that requires continuous trust in the company since they offer a service. This means I no longer trust Proton as much, which makes me much less inclined to use their services.


They better have had traffic cones on their heads. The mental image that creates is quite funny with the contrast to the serious businesmen trying to sell AI one booth over.


IIRC Meta was one of the first companies to publicly release a language model that you could run on your computer, called llama. Hence the naming of projects like llama.cpp and ollama.
The people editing their images in Blender are the same people who edit their videos in Blender lol.