[-] Sickday@kbin.run 7 points 1 month ago

I know people still enjoy this game quite a bit and my opinion shouldn't take anything from that, but this pattern of finally adding new ships to the game but putting them behind "ARX Early Access" is really predatory. I have a hunch that this is done to "encourage" more players to spend cash in the ARX store, but ships shouldn't be the mechanism to do that.

13
submitted 1 month ago by Sickday@kbin.run to c/hiphopheads@sopuli.xyz

By All Means Necessary was the first record I bought. Every track on that album is solid

Fresh for '88... you SUCKAS.

[-] Sickday@kbin.run 3 points 3 months ago

Just want to chime in that I've seen TabbyML used a fair bit at work. Tabby in particular can run locally on M1/M2/M3 and uses the Neural Engine via CoreML. The performance hit isn't noticeable at all and most of what we use it for (large autocompletes in serialized formats) it excels at.

[-] Sickday@kbin.run 4 points 4 months ago

From the article:

Fergus told Poilievre he was disregarding the speaker’s authority and, in an unusual move, said: “I order to you to withdraw from the House … for the remainder of this day’s sitting.

[-] Sickday@kbin.run 3 points 4 months ago

Grabbed Manor Lords this weekend and haven't put it down since. Pretty solid for a city builder.

[-] Sickday@kbin.run 3 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Hey just to ptich in my two cents. Our shop is running a very similar setup (Enterprise FinTech, MAU is around 100-200m across all sites), with Ubuntu and Rocky on k8s with all workstations running MacOS and Windows since compliance policies are easy to apply to both. I can vouch for Ubuntu LTS given other options. Doesn't require a support contract, really solid security patch cycles and everything runs without issues.

Also unsure of using Linux as a workstation solution since at the time of setup, all the viable distos required you to either manually roll a compliance solution, or use their specific sometimes built-in solutions (see RHEL). That may have changed in the passed few years though.

[-] Sickday@kbin.run 14 points 6 months ago

6,054.0 kB, not 6 vs 14.0 kB

[-] Sickday@kbin.run 3 points 6 months ago

I switched from i3 to sway about 3(ish?) years ago now and haven't looked back. I've had very few issues with it and frankly it's been solid for me

[-] Sickday@kbin.run 18 points 6 months ago

So $70 + MTX for poor optimization, bugs, and linear gameplay. Glad I passed on this.

[-] Sickday@kbin.run 4 points 6 months ago

I originally used namecheap but moved over to porkbun about 2 years ago now. I've really enjoyed their service since the move. The two instances where I needed to contact support were great. Issues were resolved very quick and responses weren't days apart like namecheap.

[-] Sickday@kbin.run 30 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

In my experience, that bottom image is equally applicable when Front End devs go Full Stack lol

[-] Sickday@kbin.run 6 points 7 months ago

You don't need to be a hacker to find those problems. You need to be a good detective. All good programmers are detectives.

[-] Sickday@kbin.run 10 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

I usually grant ro permissions for ~/.themes and ~/.icons on all applications to get consistent themes and cursors across my flatpak apps.

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Sickday

joined 8 months ago