desentizised

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago

They say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.

I'm not exactly a visual artist who stands to lose something in this armsrace, but that's how I tend to look at it. As a software engineer I'm fascinated by the possibilities. There were people who despised the camera when it came to be. I firmly believe that once the AI hype dies down "real" human-made art will not have suffered any setback. At the end of the day this is still people building tools to imitate something worth imitating. Nothing is ever fully original.

If someone can't see the value in art that took actual human effort to make then that is on them. If a tool is built upon millions of existing pieces of human artistic effort to make it available to the general public I'd see this as less deplorable than copying a CD to a cassette tape in the 80s. If someone tried to make money by selling what is essentially other people's work then that is obviously a different story, no matter what is being misappropriated.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

I was team Gnome before Gnome 3 came out. Nowadays I don't mind it for auxiliary computers that I don't interact with regularly. It has a huge community behind it and that is a quality in its own right. But since MATE never really managed to become a worthy successor to Gnome 2 I guess I'm team Plasma now. I got it "forced" on me by my beloved Steam Deck and I can definitely see why Valve went for it.

Currently I'm experimenting with Hyprland but that is definitely too early to call it my forever pick, so Plasma it is.

[–] [email protected] -2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)
[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

So the career intelligence muscle who is in office since 1999 can't possibly be a dictator but the comedian who only became a politician 6 years ago has already managed to dismantle a democracy while spending 3 of those 6 years commanding a wartime army against a goliath of an enemy. The things you learn on the internet.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago

rsync from ZFS to an off-site unraid every 24 hours 5 times a week. on the sixth day it does a checksum based rsync which obviously means more stress so only do it once a week. the seventh day is reserved for ZFS scrubbing every two weeks.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 month ago

I agree. If it's unfixable it has to be something out of their control. I mean nothing is unfixable but really the only explanation for a bug being too costly to fix is that something auxiliary changed which forces you to either go back to the drawing board or cut your losses.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I thought you were learning by yourself. If you have a teacher/class and you need to consult the internet for advice that probably doesn't bode well for your teacher's performance.

I'm not suggesting to use AI to cheat on a test or something, even with the existence of AI we should still try to build our own knowledge and understanding. But I mean if you got some homework or whatever and you feel like your understanding should already be further developed why not ask an advisor which has time for you 24/7? What counts is your own progress and nothing else. The goal isn't to let AI do the work and be done with it but to gain an understanding which your teacher seemingly couldn't convey to you.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Not trying to whitewash or anything but I figure it's more like Democrats won't threaten 4 years of legislative work against you unless you play ball. Under a Democrat majority Apple just has to lobby in their own interests wherever necessary, federally or otherwise, as you do. With Trump you can't sway a Republican senator's vote unless you pay his boss as well.

I hope he wrote Tim Apple on the cheque so orange man will know who it's from.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago

To me it's like the old saying from Win9x days "Help, I've deleted the internet". Removing an Internet Explorer shortcut from the desktop might be easier than nuking a Linux installation, but I think if the point is to be of service to absolute tech-illiterates then you need to be ready for anything, any edge case. And like you say, if Flatpaks and all that just work then what would be the downside of immutability?

I mean in theory one can make deep-rooted changes to macOS, but I haven't once seen it fail to upgrade successfully. And I definitely wouldn't consider Windows immutable with how many things can go wrong in practice. I've had more than a few customers who lost wifi drivers through no fault of their own, in one case the entire device wasn't visible anymore, so reinstalling a driver wouldn't have done anything, all I could do was roll back the feature update and ensure it won't install it again. In that sense, immutable Linux might even be the best offering out there today. The only thing it lacks (besides Android and SteamOS) is a multi-billion dollar company backing it for wider desktop adoption.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 months ago (3 children)

I think it's a fair point that immutable distros are still a developing concept and probably not ready for primetime, but I do feel that eventually this must be the answer to make things absolutely bulletproof for people (of which there are many) who have a natural ability of nuking their OS.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Why would it have to be KDE or XFCE? GNOME as it exists today is probably the closest to macOS' design language, and whatever you do designing any kind of operating system UI, macOS needs to be the benchmark. GNOME 2 in the olden days was my favorite DE so today I have to go for things like KDE or MATE but I'm not a novice and I can fully acknowledge that what works for me isn't what works for everyone. GNOME probably made the right decisions to lower the entry barrier towards Linux.

XFCE to me is purely a choice for outdated hardware so unless your extreme beginner has an extremely old PC XFCE is a non-starter. Whether KDE can be made more accessible to the non-initiated I can't say. Anything that has a Windows-esque taskbar is probably ill-equipped from the start as well. Again, macOS is as easy to use in a keyboard and mouse sense as tablets and smartphones are with our fingers. This is the way.

 

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