[-] rodbiren@midwest.social 2 points 3 days ago

Reactor is full of water so it's not an issue

[-] rodbiren@midwest.social 4 points 5 days ago

It just sort of sinks down. You have two ways of manipulation, the cable the camera uses for power and data and the attached rope. Between those two you sort of puppeteer/swim it into place. It actually works out pretty good and some people are real pro at it.

[-] rodbiren@midwest.social 80 points 5 days ago

A whole bunch of welds in nuclear reactors are visually inspected using cameras duct taped onto the end of incredibly long poles which also get duct taped together. This would be the inside of BWR plants near the fuel and jet pumps. There is also an "art" to moving the cameras and poles around to get the shots you need. And if you get stuck the talented people know how to get you unstuck. There are also cameras just duct taped to ropes that the camera handler "swims" to certain spots.

Don't get me wrong, we have cool ultrasonic inspecting robots as well, but I was absolutely blown away by what visual inspection looked like in practice.

PS: The high dose fields make the camera look like it is being blasted with colorful confetti because of the high energy particles bombarding the camera module.

[-] rodbiren@midwest.social 40 points 4 weeks ago

Think of the profits corporations will be able to make curing the impacts of this!

[-] rodbiren@midwest.social 44 points 5 months ago

For what it is worth, it is useful to come to the conclusion that the brain is an awful place to store something you want to remember. It may not be a list, but I certainly remember better outside my head than inside. Developing tooling that works for you is important to coming to grips with your brain.

[-] rodbiren@midwest.social 84 points 5 months ago

Good luck watermarking plaintext and locally run models. There is no good option. If you want certainty that you are dealing with a human you lose privacy. If you want privacy you cannot know where the plain text came from unless you sign each file cryptographically. Then you only know it came from a certain source, but there is no guarantee how that source made the text. Welcome to the new world.

[-] rodbiren@midwest.social 71 points 10 months ago

To some degree literally all of it. My monkey brain was designed to handle at most 150 people, wandering around all day searching for food, unprocessed food, using my body, having a close community I trust, relationship with nature, extreme knowledge of a small amount of things, and an uninterrupted sleep cycle powered by the son.

My humanity is a poor fit for the world I am in.

[-] rodbiren@midwest.social 39 points 10 months ago

Bold of this article to think the fundamentals of the economy will survive the coming climate apocalypse. Where the hell can I invest my money in growth when everything is either burning or flooding. Coffins?!?

[-] rodbiren@midwest.social 172 points 10 months ago

It's one thing to hear the warnings of scientists my entire life on the ravages of climate change. It is entirely another to see it play out in real life. News of fire and destruction will become as commonplace as school shootings in less than 10 years. Living in Hell will be normal soon.

[-] rodbiren@midwest.social 41 points 11 months ago

You can always help their software QA by pasting in the entirety of the declaration of independence. A couple of things could happen. If they comment, why did you post that? You have a human. If they give a generic response, probably an AI. If it crashes then you know they didn't think anyone would post that.

You can also post zero width spaces. Generic chatbot will respond with something meaningless and a human might not even respond. You could also post text using typoglycemia. The language will confuse most models but can usually be read by people.

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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by rodbiren@midwest.social to c/linux@lemmy.ml

I wanted to post all the workaround and configs I needed to make Linux Mint work on the Lenovo Legion 5i Pro 2022 so others who need the help can find it on a non-reddit source. This will also be helpful for when I inevitably hop distros or break my system because I am a crazy person.

The following should get Linux Mint 21.2 working reasonably well on your Lenovo Legion assuming the assuming the model is the same.

  1. Fixing stuck on mint logo after installing the nvidia driver.

Install the most recent nvidia driver using the driver manager on mint. Run the following so systemd does not stall waiting for the backlight service.

sudo systemctl mask systemd-backlight@backlight\:nvidia_0.service
  1. Edit your kernel arguments so that the backlight works on Cinnamon

Open the file:

sudo nano /etc/default/grub

Add the following to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"

acpi_backlight=video

Update grub to apply the change

sudo update grub
  1. Get a more recent kernel through one of the following methods to make suspend and resume work properly
  1. Adjust keyboard lighting (Optional)

https://github.com/4JX/L5P-Keyboard-RGB

All of that together should make the system function normal and reasonably optimal. So if you use Linux Mint or are having similar issues with your superior for some reason distribution, these may come in handy. As for future Rod Biren, quit spending all your time breaking your OS and avoiding actual work on your side projects. Loading bars are not actual progress.

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*Stares in crusty (midwest.social)
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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by rodbiren@midwest.social to c/antiquememesroadshow@lemmy.world
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submitted 11 months ago by rodbiren@midwest.social to c/linux@lemmy.ml

I like to follow articles benchmarking OSs on phoronix a lot. Whenever Arch looks bad I see comments riddled with saying that is because the default scheduler sucks. I feel fairly compitent with Linux but for some reason schedulers seemed like this black box that lives in the realm of places where I normally break my OS from not paying close attention.

Is it a program run by something like systemd? Is it a config or patch of the kernel? Which ones are good and how important are they?

Anyways, any advice on schedulers would be appreciated.

[-] rodbiren@midwest.social 36 points 11 months ago

Computers are essentially rocks we have tricked into doing math.

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submitted 1 year ago by rodbiren@midwest.social to c/linux@lemmy.ml

Just had my old dumb LG TV die after 9 years of working just dandy. I lack the desire to root around for a dead capacitor so I am currently in the market for an approximate replacement to act as the display for my Linux media center in my living room. I figure this is the right crowd for finding a non-invasive TV so my Linux machine can be the brains. I trust modern Tvs less and less.

Desired features

55"
Non terrible audio
As dumb of hardware/software as reasonably achievable
view more: next ›

rodbiren

joined 1 year ago