alexcleac

joined 4 months ago
[–] alexcleac@szmer.info 3 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

AFAIK nginx was originally created by a russian, then opensourced.

Though, now, I cannot care less for russian products, not since 24.02.2022.

[–] alexcleac@szmer.info 2 points 22 hours ago

Awesome, I've been watching this game development — it is really a great one. I enjoyed playing demo so much times, great it is released finally!

[–] alexcleac@szmer.info 6 points 23 hours ago (3 children)

Unironically, the "Soviet's build to last" idea was nothing more than a propaganda product, like "cheap, natural and tasty ice cream" and "natural sausages". In fact, comparing one-to-one tooling made in US vs Soviet tooling, it turns out that US was much higher quality and could last longer.

The primary reason for that illusion to sustain is because after soviet union fell apart, general poverty caused people to use tooling until it broke down completely — which made quality degradation of modern tooling much more apparent. The old-created tooling was produced years ago, and it was economically unsustainable at that point of time, and it was produced in huge masses disregarding actual need — making it almost as cheap as the new bought (while the latter was lower quality).

At the same time, the overall quality degradation for pricing lowering in richer countries was not noticed as much, because people were changing things over the time. I still see lots of projects, where people restore old European grinders, saws, etc — to the state that those tools look like new. They just got into awful shape, because there was an ability to replace thing, while in post-soviet countries you had no choice: either you take a good care of tool, or you don't have it at all (because of poverty).

p.s. The ice cream and sausages is really just a propaganda legent: they were adding margarine to the ice cream, and so much stabilizers to sausages, it wouldn't be allowed even in US, not speaking of EU.


Speaking of razors: I only recently learned that Gilette was producing their double-edged blades for safety razors in russia. IDK if they still are, but... yeah, that was a surprise for me.

[–] alexcleac@szmer.info 4 points 3 days ago

I like systemd overall. The ease of use, uniform interface and nice documentation is awesome.

Though each time I try to run it on outdated hardware (say, my Thinkpad X100e, which is, well, a life choice xD) — it makes whole system much slower. IMO, openrc is not as bad, and in some ways it gives some capabiilties of systemd these days.

[–] alexcleac@szmer.info 4 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Wow, thanks for suggestion of Tdarr — that project indeed looks very nice. What is. your experience using it? Any quirks?

[–] alexcleac@szmer.info 5 points 3 days ago (1 children)

My understanding of Keybase is that it was some kind identity aggregator. You were able to link identities not just by keys, but also by external services, like Twitter (at a time), email and other things.

[–] alexcleac@szmer.info 3 points 3 days ago

Country has to make a promise to switch to Euro, but there is no deadline whatsoever :)

[–] alexcleac@szmer.info 1 points 1 week ago

I’d prefer not to dual boo, but it might be the safest way to start? If I dual boot, get used to Linux and (hopefully) get everything I need working, can I then go from dual boot to erasing the Windows partition and recombining so I then only have Linux installed and can keep the work and programs I already installed on Linux?

My personal experience says: try dualbooting first, because it will make you to have a working machine continuously. Taking into account that all Linux-based OS behave vastly differently from MS Windows, it is possible to break things, when learning a new way of doing things.

The drives for my server are NTFS. Does anyone have experience with this format on Linux (I use Emby)?

I've been using an external NTFS drive for compatibility and big files storage: works as charm. The worst case scenario is you will need to install an ntfs-3g driver, although it is usually included with the distro.


As for production: I don't have much experience with that, although I can recommend you looking around tooling that solves the problem. You will need quite a bit of patience and trying things, because switching platform will definitely require you to make some shifts in usual processes you have now. Don't expect things to be obvious 100% replacement: unfortunately lots of people have this expectation, and get frustrated.

As for hardware, just looking the model up on the internet with adding "linux", or "ubuntu", or "fedora" should do the trick of figuring out if it will work.

[–] alexcleac@szmer.info 2 points 2 weeks ago

Recently bought and playing S.T.A.L.K.E.R the legends series. I am extremely pleased by quality of the release and the experience I am having!

[–] alexcleac@szmer.info 1 points 2 weeks ago

Exactly my feeling each time I get back on personal PC/laptop after whole day of working with Mac.

[–] alexcleac@szmer.info 1 points 3 weeks ago

I usually do that approach with multiplication of big numbers and square root calculation. Usually make it at most 10% error, which I consider quite a win :)

[–] alexcleac@szmer.info 2 points 2 months ago

Was worth for me to upgrade 64GiB to 1TiB :)

 
 

I am not related in any way with the company, and I am looking forward to it: the phone promises to be a good e-ink smartphone, with huge focus around conscious usage.

 

Hello there 👋

I am following the path of decreasing dependency on US products myself, and I was wondering if there is any real alternative for bandcamp? Meaning, the one that would be a proper marketplace for niche music creators, that would allow DRM-free downloads and streaming at the same time.

Bottom line: I do want to pay for music I like to support musicians, though I want to do it in a way that would allow me to listen to their work in a way I like the most.

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