[-] d13@programming.dev 5 points 2 months ago

Largely agree, with a couple exceptions: Undiscovered Country and First Contact are good; Into Darkness is bad.

[-] d13@programming.dev 5 points 3 months ago

There's a chain near me that makes a breakfast sandwich with eggs, bacon, white cheddar, a really excellent garlic aioli, and Ciabatta bread.

I go there way too much.

[-] d13@programming.dev 18 points 3 months ago

This might be my biggest TNG complaint. The character and the actor are good (or at least decent if we're being picky), but almost every time the focus is on her, the writing is absolutely awful.

[-] d13@programming.dev 7 points 3 months ago

Fringe is great. Season 1 is a bit "Monster of the week" but when it gets going it's a great ride.

[-] d13@programming.dev 20 points 4 months ago

The Punt for Red October

(Assuming American Football)

[-] d13@programming.dev 36 points 7 months ago

the AI that wrote the article

The linked article is by Dan Goodin from Ars Technica. He's not immune to mistakes, but he's been writing good articles about security for years.

Can we please not accuse everybody of being AI just because they made a mistake?

[-] d13@programming.dev 8 points 8 months ago

Logseq has an Android app and clients for the usual desktop platforms. It stores as .md files. It meets your requirements. I'm not sure why you're focused on Firefox support?

One I have my eye on is Silverbullet.md. the creator recently promoted it here and it has some nice ideas. It's a web app that you self host. Behind the scenes everything is stored in .md files.

[-] d13@programming.dev 13 points 9 months ago

This is very cool, and I've been watching the project for a month or so.

I like the query setup and the templates look very interesting. One of my biggest complaints about Logseq is how much of a pain simple query operations can be.

A few things make me hesitate a bit:

  • I've been burned on single-dev passion projects in the past.
  • As a self hosted web app, it's a bit more difficult to manage on a company owned machine. I know Electron apps get hate, but that would ease some pain here.
  • The rapid pace of development is both exciting and worrisome. For example, a recent update completely changed the underlying templating engine from a well-known open source solution to a custom solution. I worry if I rely on this, something might catch me by surprise.

What are your thoughts on those concerns, OP?

[-] d13@programming.dev 7 points 11 months ago

I think it's because Jellyfin still needs some polish.

It's getting better every day, though. I run both in parallel and usually use Jellyfin, but my family uses Plex for now.

[-] d13@programming.dev 5 points 1 year ago

Unfortunately, no, you just need training data on children in general and training data with legal porn, and these tools can combine it.

It's already being done, which is disgusting but not surprising.

People have worried about this for a long time. I remember a subplot of a sci-fi series that got into this. (I think it was The Lost Fleet, 15 years ago).

[-] d13@programming.dev 11 points 1 year ago

A few I haven't seen mentioned:

  • Moon+ Reader - My favorite ebook reader of all time.
  • Tea Time - Simple timer widgets
  • Simple Time Tracker - Track what you do
  • NES.emu, Snes9x EX+, M64+ FZ - Emulators
  • Thunder - Lemmy
  • Root Explorer - file explorer
  • Lichess - Chess, free of ads, no fees. Almost entirely FOSS.

Also +1 to the usual favorites: Firefox, Termux, Nova, etc.

[-] d13@programming.dev 4 points 1 year ago

Kubuntu currently is working really well for me. I'm not a hardcore Linux user (used it lightly for many years, daily driver for only couple), so it's nice to use Ubuntu where there's plenty of online answers. Plus I like KDE. So Kubuntu is a good fit.

I recently tried Fedora for a while, but I just had problem after problem with my hardware. It was good aside from that.

16
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by d13@programming.dev to c/lasercutting@lemm.ee

This is 3mm cast acrylic.

The design started with CardBox from Boxes.py

I made a few modifications, such as improving the lid design and adding holes to make it easier to access cards.

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d13

joined 1 year ago