MajorHavoc

joined 1 year ago
[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 1 points 1 hour ago

Nice. This is for me, if it runs on SteamDeck. I cannot be arsed to buy the latest great game system, but once a remake runs on the thing I already have, I'll try it and enjoy it.

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 3 points 1 hour ago

Yeah. God does seem super fragile, to hear their supposed friends talk.

Damn. I thought they would continue to play act at saving money for another six weeks.

The intentional plan to defraud tax payers, came out early.

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 13 points 1 day ago

The first step towards being great at anything is being shitty at that thing.

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

So how come email spam still exists

We were really naive back when email was invented.

Is there anything about Lemmy's architecture that will prevent this problem?

While Lemmy versions maintain some backwards compatibility, Lemmy is designed to move forward, and allow incremental security improvements. And it is possible to apply significant security updates to individual servers without losing access to the out of date ones.

Email really doesn't have an equivalent way to improve security, Incrementally, without dropping large legitimate parts of the network.

DMARC and DKIM are making finally progress for email security- by dropping large legitimate parts of the network.

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I have macros to swap my audio devices.

Ooh. That's really good. I didn't realize, but I need that. Thanks!

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

I think we will see this continue, but with federated product search, soon.

Small business vendors cannot afford to continue to leave their search results to Google and Amazon to control.

It's like voting on an official state imaginary friend.

Coming soon!

I'm not saying it's impossible. But I tried and failed. It's not part of the native HID spec, as far as I could tell, last time I tried. So it would, I think, at least require a serious undiscovered vulnerability.

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 2 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Wherever you land, there's some great online communities where you may find support.

A few points to hang on to:

  • Your awareness of injustice is commendable.
  • You don't have to change everything about your life all at once.
  • You're allowed to say "I don't know."
  • You have a right to change your mind.
  • You can still talk to God. If they're not up there listening (and they're probably not) - well, no harm done.
  • You don't have to give up most of the great things your faith brought you. Charity, service, kindness, and community still feel fantastic, as an agnostic.
  • Take your time to process what you're learning, and be kind and forgiving to your past self. You were raised the way you were raised. It's still part of your story, and that has value.
  • Some of what you learned in your religion may not make any sense anymore. Be patient with yourself while you learn about alternatives.
  • A lot of stuff that used to make sense to you still probably does. That's okay, too.

Edit: And some useful definitions:

  • Atheist - Non-religious.
  • Non-practicing Christian - may still believe the same things, or still partake of the same traditions, but have decided to no longer take part in the harmful structures of the church.
  • Agnostic - Unsure, or confidently sure that it doesn't matter to you, personally. Or a staunch defender of everyone's (maybe God-given) right to be unsure.

There's a lot of non-practicing Christian's out there today, thanks to shitty state of the modern church. (Which is rooted in the shitty state of the ancient church.) You don't have to stop using the term Christian just because some assholes co-opted it (several centuries ago...)

But you might want to stop using the term, that's okay, too.

Myself, I figure God can clean up their church if they want me to ever claim membership again. So far they don't seem to be treating it like a priority, if they even exist...

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 21 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Damn. These kids need to wake up and stop getting ripped off. Salary range in the listing is the law in many states now and much of the world.

It's basic self respect to expect it in the listing, and ask why it's not there, when it's missing.

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 4 points 5 days ago

They're already pretty rare, and likely to be in demand my hobbyists, I think?

 

I got tired of having to search and sign up for wherever my favorite movie is streaming this month, so I'm going back to DVDs for the foreseeable future, until the streaming overlords get their shit together. So... maybe forever. But at least for now.

It's nice. I put a disc in, and press play, and it plays.

I hadn't quite realize how much messing around the streaming services had added to my movie nights.

(Recover password, verify my email, sign up with a credit card, authorize the TV, remove the old iPad because of a device limit, sign in at least one extra time for no certain reason, sometimes discover I chose the wrong service and start over.)

 

My commentary: An AI that can be trusted with sensitive information remains a tantalizing but unattainable "holy grail".

And a quote I love from the article:

"As long as machine learning and generative AI is being deployed in production systems, we predict a heartwarmingly lucrative job market in AI security."

 

Cory Doctorow details the path to the enshitifications of Facebook and Twitter.

"This is what changed: the collapse of market, government, and labor constraints, and IP law's criminalization of disenshittifying, interoperable add-ons. This is why Zuck, an eternal creep, is now letting his creep flag fly so proudly today. Not because he's a worse person, but because he understands that he can hurt his users and workers to benefit his shareholders without facing any consequences. Zuckerberg 2025 isn't the most evil Zuck, he's the most unconstrained Zuck."

 

Cory recommends a response for Canada to the USA's promised tariffs: break ranks on oppressive IP laws and build a local right-to-repair economy.

Edit: Corrected link. Sorry about that!

 

Since Game Changer is the best thing that ever happened to game shows, I wonder if there's any chance we can get coverage of a recreational league sports team?

I don't even care what sport, and I don't care if it's not live.

Televised Pistol Shrimps games or some such would be a delightful addition.

 

This came across my GamingOnLinux feed, and I figured y'all might share my interest.

I'm excited for this dock release because my simple JSAUX HDMI dongle has always been a more reliable SteamDeck dock, for me, than my official SteamDeck dock.

I understand recent patches to the SteamDeck official dock may have solved many of the issues I was having.

But it's still cool to see a brand I already trust adding a targeted SteamDeck product.

I don't see whether it accounts for my habit of keeping my SteamDeck in a protective case, though.

 

I'm usually the one saying "AI is already as good as it's gonna get, for a long while."

This article, in contrast, is quotes from folks making the next AI generation - saying the same.

 

"We need policies that keep middlemen weak."

stood out to me.

Many of my influences have railed against middle men, and I think that's unfair. I've worked with plenty of middle men that made everyone then better off.

I've also had the unique displeasure that at least half of all links shared with me in recent years have been to a site called "Instagram", where I am unable to access the content without an account (which I refuse to make because Zuckerberg is a creepy stalker.)

I find it deeply weird that such a locked ecosystem now controls so much attention.

I find Cory Doctorow's thoughts on the problem and potential solutions to be both hopeful and cathartic.

127
The Cult of Microsoft (www.wheresyoured.at)
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by MajorHavoc@programming.dev to c/technology@lemmy.world
 

Kind of an inflammatory title, but I like to let it match for accessibility.

I've been enjoying Ed Zitron's articles lately, because they call out CEOs who aren't doing their jobs.

I'm sharing this partly because I'm honestly surprised to see criticism of Satya Nadella's leadership. I think Satya has been good for Microsoft, overall, compared to previous leaders. And I was as convinced as anyone else when the "growth mindset" first hit the news cycle. It sounds fine, after all.

TL;DR:

  • Satya has baked "growth mindset deeply into the culture at Microsoft"
  • Folks outside of the original study authors have generally failed to reproduce evidence of any value in "growth mindset"
  • Microsoft is, of course "all in" on their own brand of AI tools, and their AI tools are doing the usual harmful barf, eat the barf, barf grosser barf, re-eat that barf data corruption cycle.
  • Some interesting speculation that none of the AI code flaunted by Microsoft and Google is probably high value. Which is a speculation I confidently share, but still, I think, speculation. (Lines-of-code is a bat shit insane way to measure engineer productivity, but some folks think it's okay when an AI is doing it.)
 

You might recognize me from such comments as "All AI hucksters are scammers.", and "AI is just an excuse to enshitify while laying off real engineers.", and "I actually use current generation LLMs for a bunch of things and it can be pretty great."

In this article science fiction author and futurist Cory Doctorow is on my favorite AI soap box, and raises some interesting points.

1
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by MajorHavoc@programming.dev to c/minetest@lemmy.ml
 

Since I couldn't find it, here's a bare minimum guide to starting using the Pipeworks mod.

This recipe builds a trivial item sorter.

Mods you need:

  • Pipeworks
  • Mesecon
  • I3 Inventory (optional, strongly recommend)

Resources you need (if building this in survival):

  • 24 wood planks for 4 chests
  • a lot of leaves (for plastic for tubes and for the injector)
  • a lot of mese Crystals (for the injector and the sorting tube segment and the blinky plant)
  • 3 saplings (for the blinky plant)
  • 2 iron for the injector

To build the parts - look up the part recipes in I3 Inventory, or the MineTest wiki.

The Build:

In this order, place, on flat ground, in a straight line:

  • A chest
  • A stack wise filter injector
  • A pneumatic tube segment
  • A sorting pneumatic tube segment
  • A final chest

Now place the last two chests on the ground on either side of the 'sorting pneumatic tube segment'.

Now place a 'blinky plant' beside the 'stackwise filter injector', to get it running. Yes, it must be a blinky plant.

Now throw some crap in the first chest and watch it get moved randomly to the other 3 chests.

Now, grab an item you want sorted, say 'dirt block'. Left click on the 'sorting pneumatic tube segment'. Put the dirt block next to one of the colors. Put more dirt blocks into the first chest.

Watch the dirt blocks follow the color you chose.

Repeat with more item types.

Now your inventory is sorted, kind of.

Finally, add additional chests and sorting tube segments, as needed, to suit your personal play style.

Edit: Of course now I found a decent wiki page that has more detail, so I put that in the URL.

139
PSA - MineTest on SteamDeck (blog.rubenwardy.com)
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by MajorHavoc@programming.dev to c/steamdeck@sopuli.xyz
 

MineTest on a SteamDeck is so fun, y'all.

(Edit: MineTest is a free and open source game engine that started as a clone of Minecraft, and has grown to be that, and much more.)

I would have tried it sooner, if someone had mentioned it to me, so I'm mentioning it to you.

Edit: Disclaimer, I'm not the author of this blog. It's the walkthrough I followed to start playing.

view more: next ›