[-] themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works 1 points 20 hours ago

I did my v2 and "accessible to diy" is, while true, overselling it. It's accessible to people who already have extensive experience with soldering, though I suspect you could learn to do the specifics you need in a few days.

Don't buy that dlc, it's not worth 60€.

Look into hacking your switch. It's fun and teaches you things and you get free games out of it.

You should look into hacking your switch. If you can't do it the easy way, there's another way that's not for the faint of heart, but I did it and have never spent a dollar more on games since.

(this is, itself, a redditism)

If you liked art of rally, I suggest Parking Garage Rally Circuit. Much of the same vibe.

It's also completely unthreatened by public boycott. People who make the choice to continue using AWS do so because of vendor lock-in, and they either can't leave or are in a position where they agree with daddy bezos because they have money

I mean, you could. The problem becomes "do you have more money and lawyers than McDonald's" to keep pretending it has nothing to do with it in court.

[-] themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works 309 points 1 month ago

There absolutely no way this isn't an ad for upvote buying services lol this is so insane and transparent and the worst part is it'll work

[-] themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works 167 points 2 months ago

Their engine is called source.

The collection of libraries valve release to use steam (the piping, if you will), is called steamworks.

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logic gate rule (sh.itjust.works)
[-] themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works 292 points 5 months ago

Maybe it's time we invent JPUs (json processing units) to equalize the playing field.

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rule or something (sh.itjust.works)
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hey all, i'm looking to replace my isp's router (i know that i can, it's basically just DHCP on a specific VLAN) with my own one and i'm looking for recommendations.

here's what i would need out of it:

  • best price-to-performance ratio. the larger the NAT table it can keep in RAM the better (i run some things akin to ipv4 scanning)
  • OpenWRT support
  • at least one sfp port for internet access, supporting 5Gb/s.
  • at least one 1 Gb/s ethernet port
  • ideally 2-3 100Mb/s ethernet ports
  • wifi support: yes (don't need anything fancy, even 5GHz is optionnal but preffered)
  • LTE modem: dont care but nice to have

i had a look around the OpenWRT supported devices table but since it doesn't really list ports and i need sfp, it takes a long time to go through and read german router pages.

can anyone recommend a router that meets these at least partially?

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If you're a Lemmy dev and reading this, the problem is in pict-rs. I have sent an email to asonix with the needed changes, please tell them to check their inbox (since I can't register on their git server, I can't submit a formal PR).

Send me a PM if the email gets lost and I'll give you the line you need.

If you're not a Lemmy dev: Have you encountered an image that is suspiciously rotated here on Lemmy? Perhaps you even tried posting an image that looks right yourself and found it rotated itself! Why?!

The reason is that Lemmy strips all metadata from images you upload to it. This is because image metadata can contain, among other things, GPS coordinates or where it was taken. The problem is that when you take a picture with your phone in landscape, instead of rotating the image in memory, your phone saves the image sideways (because that's how it came off the sensor) and then adds a metadata tag that tells everyone to rotate the image as they are displaying it. You guessed it, that tag also gets deleted. In most cases, this is fine because either the picture wasn't rotated to begin with, or Lemmy image hosts actually save the properly rotated image before stripping the tag, but in some image formats, this isn't the case due to a programming oversight. I have found the fix and sent it to the person responsible for the image hosting code.

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rule (sh.itjust.works)
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themoonisacheese

joined 1 year ago