drathvedro

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago

Ah so it's about the same-ish functionality as supergfxctl and system76-power it seems. For me I'm searching for more granular control. e.g. if I'm gaming with dGPU-primary I might want to move browser and such to iGPU to free up dGPU VRAM, or just to put it to lower power states because spinning this behemoth up for youtube videos seems inefficient. Otherwise, when I'm in iGPU primary, it sometimes misdetects when to activate the dGPU and chokes the poor little thing down or, again, spins up the dGPU needlessly.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 days ago (2 children)

Can it force apps to use iGPU when dGPU is on? It's one of the things I miss from windows and couldn't figure out on linux

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 week ago

Not really. As a programmer who doesn't deal with math like at all, just working on overly-complicated CRUD's, and even for me the AI is still completely wrong and/or waste of time 9 times out of 10. And I can usually spot when my colleagues are trying to use LLM's because they submit overly descriptive yet completely fucking pointless refactors in their PR's.

[–] [email protected] 23 points 1 week ago

I thought that monster's target audience is dirbikers, downhill riders, skaters etc, not metal bands, barbers and hipsters? I think they're outcompeted by craft beer among all three

[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

As a webdev I feel like the whole internet is dying. Everything is an app now, fully controlled by google, so privacy goes out the window, and none of it is searchable anyway as genAI made search engines toast. And everyone and their cat just seem go around blocking entire /8's willy-nilly breaking the whole global network concept... Does anyone have any tips which career path to switch to?

[–] [email protected] 8 points 3 weeks ago

Prices are crazy, too. The key interest is at 20% and inflation is way over that as everyone expects rouble to crash as govt is printing bajillions to hand out to dead soldiers families.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 weeks ago

Just 130%? Pfft

Get the 200% — Redragon Alien

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago

WDYM less endowed? Looks pretty averagely endowed to me

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

Westrussia, sounds natural

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Trick question, cause that spartan chip ain't an SoC by itself. Zynq is, but it has ARM core which car run linux on it's own.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

But the local shops are often treating employees in ways that starbucks couldn't possibly get away with. Source: ex who worked 14 hr shifts without weekends at 4 different places for a couple months each and came out at net negative.

There are some nice places though, where barista is the owner, and not just some stupid rich kid trying his hand at entrepreneurship.

 

So the story is, I've got a bunch of android-based smartwatches I'm using for some hobby projects. Got tired of typing stuff on a tiny 2" screen, so I've bought some rando bluetooth kbd/mice combo. Tried with the phone and it worked fine but I had a lot of trouble pairing them with the watches and even then it stutters a lot. Thought it was just watches being laggy until I noticed that they work much better if I move the watches away for me, or if I use the peripherals behind my back.

Obviously, having to do either is far from ideal. So the question is, am I going nuts, or is too much transmitting power a thing with BT devices? Is it just interference? Any tips on how I could reduce it?

 

Alright, the title is a bit clickbaity, but hear me out!

Little background: Since the start of the Ukraine invasion, Russia and Belarus have been hit with massive sanctions, and a lot of stuff suddenly became unavailable. That includes quite a few video games that became unavailable on steam. Helldivers being one of them. And, since it started, a lot of people, myself included, have left the country in disagreement with the regime, mostly to ex-USSR countries, like Armenia, Georgia, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan. Others, who, for some reason, are unable or are unwilling to move, either resorted to piracy, or got their steam accounts switched to one of said countries, mostly with help from friends in one of them. This is a good thing in a way that that that it moves place where the taxes are paid, and gives more power to those countries, especially as they grow wary of their warmongering neighbor and increasingly drift away from their shared USSR past, effectively weakening war machine.

Now with geographic restrictions put on all of those countries on Steam, I've been pondering if there's a way to still somehow buy this game for my friends to play with, some of whom are still residing in Russia, and stumbled upon this:

https://shop.buka.ru/item/HELLDIVERS_2_versiya_RF

This is a totally legit, official store of one of the oldest major publishers in Russia, and official SONY's partner. What caught my attention is that they have two separate versions available - one for Russia and Belarus, and another for ex-USSR countries. The first one is a little problematic as it means that SONY is continuing doing business in Russia and doesn't give a fuck about it waging a war. But whatever. The second one, on the other hand, is completely nuts. As far as I can tell, it is the only place where you could obtain the game officially in said countries. With the price of roughly $40 with 20% VAT included, that'd be $8 straight into Putin's pockets for every copy sold. Sweet liberty! Plus whatever the publisher's cut is, that gets further taxed down the road. For a person who fled from dictatorship and is conscious about where their money go, or for a citizen of a country that was invaded and is still partly occupied, or a person displaced from their home because the peacekeepers just told them to fuck off and left, that sounds like a bad joke.

I do realize that VAT from video game sales is a drop in the ocean, compared to oil and gas exports. But still, I'd say that a good enough reason to keep pushing SONY to lift geographic restrictions on Steam.

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