Nitpicking but a line is missing IMHO namely The code of the program: should also suggest which file to edit, e.g potato.go. It might be obviously to anybody working with Go but for others it’s not.
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utopiah@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•[Jacobin] Citizenship by Algorithm: Narendra Modi transformed India’s biometric ID system from a tool for promoting social welfare into a mechanism of mass surveillance and disenfranchisement.
3·14 hours agoSo infuriating.
Technology is, rightfully, seen as a tool of control.
It should be a tool for emancipation, gaining and increasing agency. It’s been “sold” as such only to then gradually yet inexorably do the exact opposite.
This is deeply dangerous because it erodes trust in both governments and technology.
That being said, it’s not new. It’s been done before, it will be done again.
Consequently what could be done is to refuse any technology without safeguards, including the potential dismantle of the entire ecosystem in place the second it’s being abuse. It should be impossible to have mandatory usage without matching “canary in the coal mine” that force the system to stop AND the person responsible for it to also be removed from their function.
FWIW makes me wonder how much work would be required to have this as a Web container, e.g. Dockerfile with
FROM debian:13 RUN apt update && apt install -y qemu-system-x86 qemu-utils WORKDIR /linux-inside-outthen https://github.com/container2wasm/container2wasm#container-on-browser
Edit: FWIW the image of Debian 13 with QEMU and its utils is ~1.1Gb
Very cool, reminds me of https://jsandler18.github.io/tutorial/boot.html
utopiah@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Recommendations for after installing Linux (Mint) coming from Windows for best practices for a casual user ?
1·2 days agoHalf a dozen people said so already but I’ll repeat :
backup your stuff.
You are like a tightrope walker on a high line without security. Sure the view is amazing, yes you feel free… but a misstep and that’s it.
How? Well depends what your data is but start simple, copy your most important files, e.g. family photos, personal notes, etc (NOT HD movies from the Internet… not anything you can get elsewhere) on a USB stick you go stuffed in a drawer.
Once you DO have your stuff saved though, please, pretty please DO go crazy! Have fun, try weird stuff, bork your installation… and restart from a neat safe place. It’s honestly amazing to learn, so deeply empowering for yourself and those around you. Just make sure your data don’t suffer from it.
reMarkable isn’t about replacing books. You can have a PocketBook with KOReader for 120EUR. It’s not a price per book comparison, IMHO it’s a price per sketch and thus ideas, work, presentations, etc because that’s where reMarkable is unique, low latency e-ink writing.
For “just” reading there are plenty of alternatives, including cheaper alternatives.
Had one from the start and also had a reMarkable 1, 2, Pro and e-readers with e-ink. I did discuss all that before so feel free to check my comment history. You can also check related prorotypes at https://fabien.benetou.fr/Tools/Eink including for the PineNote.
Now on your questions :
how usable is the pinenote with Linux?
Last time I check it didn’t run well enough (basically CLI only) so I’m still on their stock Android OS. Worked great. According to other comments it seems fine now and I’m familiar with
KOReaderand a bitXournal++so I’ll try again.How hard is the install process?
Easy, I didn’t do anything ;)
Can an average Linux user/self hoster use it daily?
Well in my case yes but again Android, so if you are familiar with it, e.g.
adbthen it’s easy.How’s battery?
Fine but power management kind of sucks so it will not go to sleep properly and thus waste battery. It’s also heavy so honestly I wouldn’t travel with it.
Couldn’t find many reviews online…
Again, I did share on Lemmy quite a bit. I do warmly recommend it if you are a tinkerer who doesn’t travel too often. If you are a minimalist who wants to get things done then IMHO reMarkable is better.
The version of Debian it shipped with had a bug where I couldn’t install any software updates without deleting some random lib64 directory. Once I did that, everything was fine.
Neat, I’m still running the stock Android but I’ll try. How long ago did you do that? Is your fix documented somewhere?
I don’t see ads but if I were to, and despite all my precautions some would be on topic based on my past behavior I would methodically dissect to find out the leak. Namely I would try to automate the process :
- identify a place showing ads
- take an action, e.g. search or browser, on a verifiable unique topic (in order to prevent from generic suggestions, e.g medication during flu season)
- verify if the ads become relevant
- enable/disable any of the tools used, repeat
FWIW before whine about the lack of editing or digitization : take of photo of the result on your phone, auto-upload to your desktop or even server and voila, a proper process to have your cake and eat it too.
I very often take a basic A4 piece of paper, or even a napkin, whatever is around really, then sketch to summarize a complex situation, snap a pic and send it to myself. Amazing way to think, very flexible and intuitive, at basically no cost and entirely private. Sure you still have to re-draw it after, IF you want to, but typically the idea itself is already on a substrate, maybe that’s enough. If you want to edit it… guess what, you can edit the photo itself, no need to vectorize it first. Paper is great.
Pretty much all open hardware devices should be on such a list, e.g.
- NitroKey for both authentication tokens and storage (of e.g ssh keys)
- PGB-1 (based on RP2040) or Haxophone (based on RPi Zero) for music
- Precursor for token and dev (via its own FPGA)
so check CrowdSupply for more of such things.
I’d also add reMarkable. Sure you can use their cloud but you do NOT have to. It means you have your own Linux e-reader but also sketchpad entirely offline. You can work and sync with
sshorrsyncand even setup your own cloud, cf https://github.com/ddvk/rmfakecloud . If you want something more open from the start check the PineNote but it’s harder to get and you have to tinker a bit more.
utopiah@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Have Nvidia drivers on Linux gotten worse over later generations?
4·6 days agoNo doubt NVIDIA is peddling AI as they are financially depending on it now.
Now from claiming something is powerful and even used to actually shipping code on something low level and benchmarkable like (GPU) drivers I have doubt. I imagine they can say they use AI there to rephrase comment and it would “technically correct” but beyond that I’m still skeptical.
Regarding chip design, AI has been used for decades … if you consider routing to be AI. It’s not generative in the modern sense, it’s not using LLM, but it’s automated a process.
To me it’s the typical Harvard Business School playbook. C-suite repeat keywords they read in their peer most popular magazine, they aggregate in a document they call “strategy” they lower down the chain of commands people “execute” that because they must, thanks to KPIs.
I’d love to hear it from an actual engineer working on drivers but I imagine it’d be hard to get a honest opinion with NDAs and all.
Thanks for providing all the sources!
utopiah@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Have Nvidia drivers on Linux gotten worse over later generations?
6·6 days agoSource please
utopiah@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Have Nvidia drivers on Linux gotten worse over later generations?
41·6 days agoSure, but FWIW I play from AAA to indies and it “works” as in no bug, no noticeable visual glitch.
I don’t benchmark from my driver version to the previous one on Windows or Linux or a price point equivalent with AMD hardware, I just play. I don’t think anybody gain much from checking performance benchmarks before playing a game, at least I can say for sure to me that’s not part of the fun.
I would notice if something was blatantly wrong e.g 50% performance hit, but I wouldn’t if it’s 5% hit. I don’t really care for it as it doesn’t affect my gameplay. Like I said, it’s from a casual player, not a pro player nor a game tinkerer.
Working “better” on Windows means nothing to me. Either I can play and I’m happy or I can’t (which never happened) then I’d be disappointed and potentially check why.
PS: I’m also a developer of XR content so I’m relatively confident I’d spot any significant problem.
utopiah@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Have Nvidia drivers on Linux gotten worse over later generations?
61·6 days agoNo idea, I’ve been playing “normal” games and VR games with my NVIDIA card for years now on Debian and… it just works. It just keeps on working. Maybe people are hardcore tinkerers that mess with specific options but me, I just play and I’m happy with it.
However we need to educate the masses.
Well that’s kind of the earlier point, the working masses already know. What they might not understand is that they can use a VPN outside of the office and how it benefits them.
utopiah@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•What dystopian surveillance things from your country you can't escape?
2·7 days agocredit cards, debit cards, and now cashless vendors
FWIW in Belgium you can get prepaid nameless cards. The post and their bank partner know it’s yours (due to KYC) but not the shops and for online shops you can use drop boxes.
For membership cards I specifically reject because of that. It’s optional though so IMHO it’s precisely the easiest thing to escape, just say no.
utopiah@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•What dystopian surveillance things from your country you can't escape?
1·7 days ago(double post, might want to delete this one and keep the other one, I replied there)
utopiah@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•What dystopian surveillance things from your country you can't escape?
1·7 days agoMakes me curious if there is a per country list of banks that provide an option NOT to have that. I know that if my bank were to do force such limitations I’d consider moving to another one.


Might want to read on TDD, it’s been around since last the last millennium (OK 1999 according to Wikipedia, point is, it’s not new).