[-] christophski@feddit.uk 109 points 1 month ago

The chicken egg came before the chicken, as the thing that laid the chicken egg was not quite a chicken

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This may be deemed slightly off topic but I felt like this community might know the answer to this. I'm looking for a way to permanently embed information about who is in a photo, but when I search Google I just get some forum posts from 10 years ago. Surely there is something more recent? How would you go about doing this? Let's assume they are JPG.

I thought about this when looking through photos from my grandparents, where the names are written on the back of the photo. I have many digital photos from ten years ago and I've already forgotten the names of some of the people so imagine what it will be like in another 30 years.

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submitted 5 months ago by christophski@feddit.uk to c/linux@lemmy.ml

When I first started using Linux 15 years ago (Ubuntu) , if there was some software you wanted that wasn't in the distro's repos you can probably bet that there was a PPA you could add to your system in order to get it.

Seems that nowadays this is basically dead. Some people provide appimage, snap or flatpak but these don't integrate well into the system at all and don't integrate with the system updater.

I use Spek for audio analysis and yesterday it told me I didn't have permission to read a file, I a directory that I owned, that I definitely have permission to read. Took me ages to realise it was because Spek was a snap.

I get that these new package formats provide all the dependencies an app needs, but PPAs felt more centralised and integrated in terms of system updates and the system itself. Have they just fallen out of favour?

[-] christophski@feddit.uk 33 points 5 months ago

Everyone was in favor of saving Hitler's brain. But when you put it in the body of a great white shark. Ooo, suddenly you go too far!

[-] christophski@feddit.uk 40 points 6 months ago

Satirical candidate that pretends to be from outer space beat a racist party in the London Mayor election

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Does anyone know more about this? Sounds like distributing tasks to other processors that are not really designed for the job? Articles are making it out to be a miracle and not sure whether to believe it

[-] christophski@feddit.uk 42 points 7 months ago

Sounds like both things are a problem?

[-] christophski@feddit.uk 36 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Literally the opposite of friendly. Already in the hello world you have two imports for extremely basic functionality (why should I have to import the ability to throw exceptions??) and a completely enigmatic symbol ' that apparently has a significant function.

A "friendly" programming language should be readable without knowing esoteric symbols.

Really got my hopes up with that headline that it'd be a python-level intuitive-to-read language with static typing.

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submitted 1 year ago by christophski@feddit.uk to c/linux@lemmy.ml
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[-] christophski@feddit.uk 44 points 1 year ago

I don't understand, it seems perfectly reasonable - people are just so used to these products being sold at a loss or at cost and subsidised by huge companies.

I would happily pay extra to not be tied to a massive corporation.

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[-] christophski@feddit.uk 93 points 1 year ago

Ask Historians had so much high quality content and there strict moderating ensured it stayed that wau

[-] christophski@feddit.uk 38 points 1 year ago

This is just the continuation of the instagrammification if reddit. They want to turn it into a influencer platform where people are desperately trying to make money so that they can take a big cut of it.

[-] christophski@feddit.uk 142 points 1 year ago

Really would be amazing if godot became the Blender of the games world. A serious open source contender used by major studios.

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Does anyone know the best way to route traffic from transmission through Mullvad?

I have transmissionset up on my plex server which I control using tranmission remote and want to download my Linux ISOs with privacy.

I have downloaded the wireguard config and can connect to it using wg-quick, but I don't want all traffic going through it, only transmission.

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So far my experience with Nextcloud has been that it is a pain in the arse to install, and once it's installed is slow as anything. Literally couldn't run it on my pi 3b, now got it up and running pretty nicely on a NUC but it's still not great. Have caching set up.

I have the notes app installed on my android phone and I can never used rich text editing because it gives timeout error.

This shouldn't be this complicated. All I want is to de-Google my documents and notes, and self-host my kanban. I don't really need the rest though it's nice to have the options.

Do people use alternatives? Am I doing something completely wrong? I set it up using nginx which I know is not supported, but the alternative using Docker AIO didn't allow me to use custom port easily.

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I heard this on The Infinite Monkey Cage yesterday and had to look it up and share.

[-] christophski@feddit.uk 84 points 1 year ago

Not having kids because of climate change is stupid. You are leaving the world in the hands of people who care less than you.

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What's something happening in your field of work or study that you think could really change things in the future?

[-] christophski@feddit.uk 41 points 1 year ago

N o s h I t

[-] christophski@feddit.uk 42 points 1 year ago

More catastrophic than any of that would be the loss of Google Cloud Platform. A huge amount of the Internet runs on Google cloud platform, millions of businesses, even Spotify and Twitter are hosted on Google cloud platform. So unless they have a hybrid-cloud strategy, which I can guarantee for 99.99999% they do not, then a huge section of the Internet and business in general goes down.

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christophski

joined 1 year ago