small_crow

joined 2 years ago
[–] small_crow@lemmy.ca 10 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I'm sorry to inform you that you will be hearing every word that comes out of his mouth for at least another four years. You might want to disconnect if it really bothers you.

[–] small_crow@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yep! I mean, it's been two years now. I've tried TLP, Powertop, and both combined.

They improve things but I still only get about 5 hours, half the battery life I did in Windows 11. I've accepted these downsides because I already have the laptop and can't just go buy a new one, but a device with proper Linux support has real upsides.

[–] small_crow@lemmy.ca 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

I bought an Ideapad Slim 7 Carbon (sold as yoga in other markets and looks identical to the Yoga Pro 7 you mention) for its beautiful screen, similar to your Yoga option but only 90hz, and its thin and light body a couple of years ago. The OOB experience in Windows was great (for Windows) and it's been mostly good in Linux. I needed to replace its m.2 wireless card for compatibility reasons, battery life is very short in Linux, and the speakers don't function - the firmware on the device doesn't adequately identify its audio hardware so that the Linux kernel can make use of its built-in amplifier.

Ideapads don't get the same Linux support as Thinkpads, so there's been no help from Lenovo. You may be in the same boat with a yoga. Even Cirrus (the makers of the amp) tried to update their drivers but couldn't do anything with what Lenovo makes accessible in its firmware.

Maybe newer models have improved in this regard. If I knew the speakers would be an intractable problem when I was shopping I wouldn't have bought it.

It's a hybrid device - AMD processor with Nvidia GPU - which is a hassle. I couldn't get it to work properly myself, wound up going with a gaming distro (Nobara) to deal with it. It's mostly fine. It also doesn't shut down. I assume some bios setting I don't have access to is not interacting well with the way Linux shuts down. There are minimal bios settings available to manipulate (because Ideapad's are not considered power-user devices).

Build quality of the laptop itself is also mostly good, though the keyboard is on the flimsy side. My 'c' key's switch broke in a way that can't be repaired so it occasionally pops out of place. That started about a year in.

[–] small_crow@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I would need to relocate my parents for that, because they live in the middle of nowhere and I needed to relocate to a city for work.

[–] small_crow@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago

Everything good is because I did it, everything bad is because the other guys.

~ Roman Senators probably

[–] small_crow@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago

I wish I could have continued the boycott but I spent like 30% more on groceries when I was avoiding Loblaws properties and it was not sustainable. What's the solution when every store is gouging?

[–] small_crow@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago

This website has ads, despite my ublock extension, and threw a full-page interruption at me asking for my email address twice while I tried to scroll. I gave up before I even got to the content. That's some user-hostile bullshit.

[–] small_crow@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

It is an unfortunate thumbnail.

[–] small_crow@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 years ago

I remember telling my high school guidance counsellor I was planning on becoming a programmer. She looked at me, head tilted like a confused dog and asked what excited me about Event Programming (as in, planning and scheduling large in-person events).

That was the first time someone didn't understand what I did for work, and it was about 5 years before I started doing it.

[–] small_crow@lemmy.ca 0 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Yeah once every 3 months seems to be about the sweet spot for me. The Solstice/Equinox thing is mostly just a way of preparing myself mentally. It flows with the changing of seasons and gives a naturally occuring cadence to it.

[–] small_crow@lemmy.ca 0 points 2 years ago (3 children)

It can do wonders. I have a (semi) quarterly ritual - one I'll be partaking in soon to coincide with the Vernal Equinox - of taking a large dose of psilocybin and diving into my own psyche for an afternoon. Its hard to explain the way it helps to change thought patterns.

With the right set going in you can really see the harmful ruts you've fallen into, recognize their manifestations and reroute. My last trip, during the winter solstice, snapped me out of a depressive episode I'd been battling for a year. It helped me see that I'd been spending my time and effort trying to live a life I'd long since stopped being excited for, for reasons unrelated to my depression, and it helped me feel empathy towards myself, so I could move forward on a new path, at peace.

It wouldn't have happened had I not been working on getting myself out of that rut for weeks prior through art, self reflection and seeking support, but it truly came to fruition after breaking down the barriers of my mind, destroying my ego for an afternoon, travelling through time and space and coming out the other side renewed.

[–] small_crow@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 years ago

My wife is on SSRI's. It takes her twice as long as me to feel the effects of LSD and Psilocybin and they seem to last a shorter duration, but the effects are not blunted. Could be down to biology/metabolism.

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