[-] dandelion@beehaw.org 6 points 8 months ago

As a fellow Beehaw local, ditto. Would definitely be a shame, even if I can appreciate why it's being considered.

I do think the potential federation to build a unified alternative to centralised megacorps with freedom of movement for users is well worth the cost, and Beehaw leaving the party erodes that, but ultimately what will hit me on a day to day will be the loss of the usage pattern described above.

[-] dandelion@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago

Where do we stand on hoarding code to protect against outsourcing? I have a friend who is encouraging his team to do everything he can to hoard and make it impossible for recently onboarded individuals in a "cheaper cost center" to mess with it.

I think it's the right call, for both the team and the company. The team wants to keep their job, and to keep building the thing they worked so hard on. But I think it's also best for the company. Management can't control themselves when they see that they can get literally 10 engineers for the price of 1 local engineer. They know that each of the 10 is going to be less good than than a local engineer, but they always fall for "but still, they're not that much worse and for that price how can I lose!". Of course, the damage of 10s of mediocre-bad engineers is far more costly, especially when outsourcing an existing project. So I'd say it's the right thing for everyone for the team to protect their code ownership anyway they can.

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I hear Sam Newman's - Monoliths to Microservices is worth a read.

[-] dandelion@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

I just did. I'm lucky that I can afford it. Although, because of tax, it affects my take home way less than 20%.

It's wild really. I'm lucky, and most of my career I've been in the maximum tax bracket in my country. Also cause I'm lucky, I kept getting raises and bonuses, because I work damn hard and I'm pretty good at what I do.

The thing is though, I'm no better off in terms of my life quality for all that money. I live in a small semi-detached in a nowhere town. I'm incredibly grateful to have been able to buy rather than rent, but I'd still like to strive for a little more space, a little more privacy or a little more excitement. But the way property is, even though I'm earning well, it seems impossible. I've tried unsuccessfully 3 times in the last 5 years to move , and come to the conclusion without earning a considerable amount more than I am it's impossible.

My basic needs were met long ago. I find ways to waste money here and there, but nothing to really work towards. I guess I could have kids, but this place is too small for a dog, let alone a couple of sprogs, and I wouldn't wish this world on another generation. The only good reason to be earning more for me is to maybe protect the quality of life I have should I lose my job or the situation gets worse in general (inflation, climate change etc), and again it doesn't seem like it's much protection. I believe in the important of tax, I'd pay even more if I thought it'd be used for good, but with this circus in charge, it'd hard to imagine much of my considerable tax bill going to help people rather than ending up in the pocket of some corpo with a government contract.

Add to that, jobs seem to get worse and worse. I swear everyone I know, across multiple sectors, is burning out. Corpos and governments alike are treating people like garbage, working them to death then discarding them as reward. Profits go up. Nothing of value gets made. Everyone but the bosses gets fucked.

As for my job, I worked hard and gave it a lot. I've seen the company mistreat and discarded good people for years, while outsourcing to halfwits and grifters (and I can't even be that angry at the grifters given what they're paid regionally). It's impossible to make a positive change, although I still try. But I hate it. The job grinds me down and takes everything.

I plan to work as little as possible, even if it means cutting back. I live in hope that it'll mean I recover a little, maybe find some joy again. Not much hope, but worth 20%.

(Sorry for that becoming antiwork tirade. It's been a shitty few years.)

[-] dandelion@beehaw.org 6 points 1 year ago

I'm going out my damn mind trying to work out what I should set it at. I've been obsessively adding more and more temperature and humidity sensors around my living space to work out exactly what my idiot brain thinks is comfortable.

I don't understand why 23C/50% makes me feel like I'm in the fucking Amazon rainforest one day, but on another I feel like I've got ice forming on my damn face like Jack Nicholson at the end of The Shining.

I'm this close to buying a ZigBee rectal thermometer. Core body temperature has to be the missing piece. (I suppose any ZigBee environment sensor can be a rectal one if I bite down on something first).

(Oh and lux, I wonder if lux levels tricked my brain but that doesn't seem to correlate either!)

[-] dandelion@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago

While I appreciate the difference between mirroring and emulation, @lemmyvore@feddit.nl might have a point in so far as scrcpy and other options that aren't emulation, may still be part of the reason why no one is making polished emulation options. If a dev can get by with a bunch of physical devices connected and controllev via adb, scrcpy and the like, or a passable emulator in Android Studio, then there's less reason for them to build or contribute to an emulator for their needs, and consequently op (and the rest of us) don't get a shiny open-source emulator.

[-] dandelion@beehaw.org 5 points 1 year ago

Man! I was super excited about this, being a big NixOS fan, but then I realised that the "Way" bit is going to kick me in the nuts. I haven't made the switch to wayland yet; I keep thinking about switching, but last time I checked being tied to i3 and nvidia hardware scared me off (although I'm aware sway is a drop-in alternative to i3, but it's an extra complication). Another reason to make the switch when I can though!

Out of curiosity, how do big media apps treat something like Waydroid? Like, I imagine Netflix and co being awkward with anything like this in a misplaced attempted to prevent "piracy". Do you find apps treating you like a second class citizen?

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submitted 1 year ago by dandelion@beehaw.org to c/gaming@beehaw.org

What is everyone's recommendations for great Cyberpunk games?

Following from a comment I made elsewhere about my conflicted feelings on 2077;

I had a great time with it myself, despite many obvious flaws. It seems to scratch an itch that I've yet to find an alternative way to scratch!

Maybe it's as simple as cyberpunk fallout? But the worlds texture (again despite it's imperfections) feels more than just cyberpunk. The fallout comparison has other similarities too (apart from the buggy engine lol), I love the active and relatively expensive mod scene too.

I was definitely disappointed that the story felt a bit limited, but I'm looking forward to a new play through when the DLC is out, even if it's another trainwreck.

I loved the anime too which makes me excited for my next play through, similar to how reading the Witcher books opened up a whole new lover for the Witcher 3, although there's much less of a connection between the Cyberpunk game and the anime obviously.

Long story short, I can understand others frustration with the game, and I hope (perhaps naïvely) that CDProjectRED get their shit together with how they treat there devs. But despite that I loved it, and deeply hope they don't abandon the franchise due to how badly the first release went. I must guiltily confess that it's a real struggle not to preorder the DLC out of the vague sense that it'd count as a vote to stick with it. I won't, mostly because corpos don't work that way, and I don't want to endorse the bad behaviour towards their Devs especially, but still.

So yeah anyone got anything else to scratch that Cyberpunk itch, especially cyberpunk worlds with a similar texture and/or with a fallout/Skyrim style game loop? But frankly all cyberpunk is of interest.

Off the top of my head I can recommend;

  • Satellite Reign - Great action RPG (or can can be played in a more strategic turn-based-via-pauses mode). Really like the freedom to go anywhere and try anything and all discovering all the ways to combine those classic cyberpunk skills. Coop mode is great too.
  • Shadowrun Returns - All I can remember based on my 2014 review is I liked it, but evidently it didn't stick with me mentally 🤷 I vaguely remember the pacing and gameplay felt a bit off, but the story felt very rich, if a tad inaccessible.
  • Deus Ex - I'd say has a tangible different feel of cyberpunk to what I'm aiming for here, but obviously can't be ignored. The first one is obviously a classic, but some fun was had with the more recent iterations, but if I'm honest I prefer Cyberpunk 2077 to all but the first (forgive me my sins)

Actually while I'm bothering you people, I keep meaning to go back to the Shadowrun series but I find the situation with sequels, addons and DLC in the series hella-confusing! Recommendations welcome!

[-] dandelion@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

I had a great time with it myself, despite many obvious flaws. It seems to scratch an itch that I've yet to find an alternative way to scratch!

Maybe it's as simple as cyberpunk fallout? But the worlds texture (again despite it's imperfections) feels more than just cyberpunk. The fallout comparison has other similarities too (apart from the buggy engine lol), I love the active and relatively expensive mod scene too.

I was definitely disappointed that the story felt a bit limited, but I'm looking forward to a new play through when the DLC is out, even if it's another trainwreck.

I loved the anime too which makes me excited for my next play through, similar to how reading the Witcher books opened up a whole new lover for the Witcher 3, although there's much less of a connection between the Cyberpunk game and the anime obviously.

Long story short, I can understand others frustration with the game, and I hope (perhaps naïvely) that CDProjectRED get their shit together with how they treat there devs. But despite that I loved it, and deeply hope they don't abandon the franchise due to how badly the first release went. I must guiltily confess that it's a real struggle not to preorder the DLC out of the vague sense that it'd count as a vote to stick with it. I won't, mostly because corpos don't work that way, and I don't want to endorse the bad behaviour towards their Devs especially, but still.

[-] dandelion@beehaw.org 12 points 1 year ago

Go easy on people. It's hard to change, and something like lemmy can be intimidating for people to get on board with. That's ignoring the fact that even if they move they can't force their communities to come with them.

I'm personally happy to see the back of Reddit, and am convincing anyone I can to switch too, but I can understand the challenge for the average user to switch. Hell, even Reddit is a technical step-up for a lotta people. The tech world has forced a paradigm that traps the average user, using the fact it all appears free as the bait. Be angry at big tech, not the ones they swindled.

[-] dandelion@beehaw.org 8 points 1 year ago

I'd say even if the overall efficiency ends up lower with automation (not that you're saying that or that it's true) I'd say it's still the right course.

If we in developed countries are saying that working in a factory is degrading and inhumane work, then it's not much of a solution to offload it to a country with people desperate enough to do it anyway. It doesn't solve the problem if we get our own people to do it either, by incentive or otherwise.

The aim should be that no one is stuck doing degrading, unfulfilling work. If automation fails to be as efficient than human labour, be it in the short term or long term, and whether that be in terms of profit or resources, it's still worth it to minimise the number of people stuck in unfulfilling wage slavery.

Again, to emphasise the point, even if human hands are cheaper than automation for the next hundred years, we should still drive to automation.

That being said, this all assumes we get our shit together as a society to get UBI and other ways for people to live meaningful lives without the factory work!

[-] dandelion@beehaw.org 4 points 1 year ago

Nice one 👍. I've been looking to replace onenote handwritten notes for years with something with better Linux support. Interested to give this a try! Thanks for sharing!

[-] dandelion@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago

I briefly worked in safety critical software, so adjacent to defence and aeronautical in the UK. I recall that when the UK was asking for the source code for windows running on the trident subs at the time (which is terrifying thought at the best of times. A whole new meaning to blue screen of death) that UK gov had asked to inspect the source code but was told to swivel. IIRC US and China were both allowed to look. That was all on the grapevine though, and I was still a kid so obv take with a pinch of salt, but I'm inclined to believe it.

I had more direct experience in my role validating software to run on military aircraft. We were contracted in to "prove" that the software was up to do-178b security stand and bug free via line by line inspection and some other techniques (which was a joy as you can imagine). I never got the impression that the source would be shared with the government, only that it had to meet the standard.

Interesting sidenote there, was that because it was for defence, being up to the standard was really marketing more than legal requirement. We'd find bugs that would trigger hard reboots of the hardware and the message was always "thanks for letting us know, but it's too expensive to get the original contractors back to fix it so we'll just ignore it". I think they'd have been legally obliged to do something for civilian aircraft but military is a different game.

(Again should emphasise these are vague memories from working a gap year before my masters, so take with pinch of salt.)

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dandelion

joined 1 year ago