lime

joined 2 months ago
[–] lime@feddit.nu 1 points 12 minutes ago

most of europe explicitly does not have free speech, because it's commonly understood that harmful speech exists. i don't know what he's trying to convey with that idea but he comes across as misinformed, and not a little bit controlling ("should")

[–] lime@feddit.nu 4 points 3 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago) (3 children)

i can chime in with some actual experience!

my current problems with KDE are

  • the greeter only accepts my password on the secondary monitor
  • the compositor shuts down whenever something uses the GPU even though the setting is off
  • my primary desktop randomly shunts itself to the right, plopping on top of the desktop on the secondary display and leaving a big black void on half my primary until plasmashell is restarted
  • my panels keep collapsing their content down to the width of a single pixel until i resize them
  • Wayland just crashloops and is completely unusable (no, i don't have an nvidia card)
  • i still can't get the acrylic transparency to work :(

and what's fun about this is, the issues are so intermittent and random that i never know what i'm going to get on a given day!

[–] lime@feddit.nu 3 points 6 hours ago

as i understand it, the money goes to the foundation, and it's the corporation that develops the browser. so it's probably not strictly forbidden, but it does imply that the money is not for browser development.

[–] lime@feddit.nu 2 points 14 hours ago

good point, ruby is a good comparison. although, ruby is very different under the hood. it's magically dynamic in a completely different way, and it also never really got the penetration on the system level that python did.

none of this is to take away from the fact that python packaging is bad. i know how to work it because i've been programming in python for 14 years, but trying to teach people makes the problem obvious. and yet.

[–] lime@feddit.nu 7 points 1 day ago

in the health sector specifically, IT is a mess because you can't stop people from working or there will be deaths. one thing you should take away from this is that their jobs are important and it is crucial that they can do them. it is your job to support them; anything that stops them doing their job or makes it take longer, even once, is dangerous. improving infra for its own sake is not a good idea because it comes at the risk of peoples lives. the details don't matter in the face of that.

if this stresses you out, you can absolutely change jobs. i did.

if you think you can work within those parameters, and you think you can find ways to improve the system in-place while mitigating the risks, then you will be highly respected.

[–] lime@feddit.nu 12 points 1 day ago

hypothesis: the last reply is usually left there to stop hundreds of people replying that exact same thing below.

[–] lime@feddit.nu 1 points 1 day ago

sure, do that. and good luck with this, i did something similar for a project once and as usual its those last 5% that are going to cost you 90% of the time.

[–] lime@feddit.nu 39 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (3 children)

mozilla takes donations, but they don't fund Firefox development with that money. that's usually what people have against it.

[–] lime@feddit.nu 7 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

i don't know if it counts as proper cyberpunk but it floated to tie top of my mind when i read the post.

in fall 2014 i was visiting a friend in stockholm, and through some weird mix of circumstances we found ourselves in the apartment of a friend of a friend of theirs, at three in the afternoon, like eight of us in a three-person sofa bed and watching Algorithm. the guy who lived there really wanted to show it to us since he thought it was so cool, gritty and realistic. i remember that he had a photograph on his wall of him shaking hands with the king. i think he worked for google. anyway...

it is one of the worst movies i've seen. and it's not funny bad. it's an angsty drama about a computer hacker hiding from the authorities, so it's mostly about how good he is with computers. all in this muted gray-green color, it's mostly shot day-for-night, and it's just soooo boring.

the only detail i vividly remember is a scene where the protagonist swaps to a new burner phone. he does this by taking the SIM card out, throwing the old phone in a bin, and putting the SIM into the new phone. i still think about that scene.

[–] lime@feddit.nu 2 points 1 day ago

humor is the subversion of expectations. what you're doing is a well-known improv technique known as "no."

[–] lime@feddit.nu 1 points 1 day ago

i've seen something like this before, where the kernel holds the file handle open for the process so that it thinks the file is still there. i think it's related to how the program closes the file but i don't remember the details. restarting qbittorent will most likely fix it.

[–] lime@feddit.nu 3 points 1 day ago
 

I have two monitors, one 1440x3440 and one 1080x1920 to its right. Every boot, the desktop on my left monitor moves over and displays on top of the right one. Killing and restarting plasmashell moves it to where it should be, but i'd love to fix this without adding that to my .xsession. Thing is, i'm not versed enough in the KDE internals to know where this issue even stems from.

I'm running EndeavourOS with Plasma 6.1.5 on X11. I haven't tried wayland since Plasma 6 switched to it and then promptly flickered itself into a crash.

Edit: This machine runs the amdgpu-pro driver, and has done since before plasma 6 released. i didn't have this problem on plasma 5.

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