Yeah, when I first saw the community name my first thought was that it was about being sick of the endless vitriolic spam towards him. I didn't even know there was 'worship' of him, much less to the point of feeling like spam - like you said, funny how echo chambers work.
Flicsmo
Yeah community isn't a very distinct name. Perhaps we should just shorten it to commie.
Adobe Firefly (AI art generator that's trained only off images Adobe owns) is going to be big soon. It's a shame that the concerns over AI and copyright lead to putting more money in the pockets of whichever companies gobble up the most stock images.
I believe it is, yeah. I hear kbin.social's servers are absolutely swamped right now and having lots of issues, so I don't want to contribute to that, but I'm probably going to make a kbin instance my home soon. Does anyone know where to find a list of instances kbin.social has defederated?
This is a cool idea! I've seen split keyboards, but never one with the content in the middle. I'm pretty sure the only way of implementing this would be in a custom text editor app as I don't think it's possible to have a system keyboard go to the sides of content and squish it like that (on both iOS and Android), but I'd be happy to be wrong.
My smaller-than-average hands combined with how large phones are nowadays makes me have little trouble with the size of typical phone keyboards - I actually use one that lets you 'shrink' the typing area a bit as I find it more comfortable - but the comfort factor of holding a phone horizontally is big. I don't need to do much typing on my phone right now but if I did, I would definitely download an app like this.
Same here, not 100% sure I think it's because of a lack of hardware H.265 decoding (in my case, at least)
Looks great! Realistic skin is tough to get, nicely done. Btw, by default Stable Diffusion embeds generation info (prompts, seed, model etc) into the image - you can see it by opening the file in a text editor.
Garuda has a Lite edition that doesn't include any of the theming, just vanilla KDE Plasma. It's been my daily driver for a year or two now, I really like it. What sets it apart are the GUI tools for system maintenance and tweaking, in which it'd be easy to mess things up, but they make doing common changes and adjustments easy. I don't know if that makes it good or bad for beginners, I guess it depends on the person.
Whaaat!! I can't believe that's real! Amazing
That one on the left is wild! Definitely worth sleeping outside lol
You're underrepresenting the complications of NixOS and overrepresenting the complications of Arch. For example, to install Steam I would run sudo pacman -Syu steam
. On a typical Arch setup that's all that's needed.
Another example is how to install Steam. In Arch, the wiki must tell you all the manual steps required to enable multilib, install the steam package, install 32bit dependencies, yada yada.
And that's why the Arch wiki is so great - it has details and links about everything that goes into making something work. If you want to learn more or if something goes wrong it's all right there.
But yes, I think you hit the nail on the head at the end there - hackability is Arch's strength, everything is exposed and flexible to tinkering. It's easy to make almost anything work, and easy to learn how it works. That's very different from NixOS's core philosophy of stability and reproducibility.
There are inherent pros and cons to both approaches - it really comes down to a mix of personal preference and using the right tool for the right job. They're apples and oranges, and the article framing NixOS as a superior successor to Arch is as silly as the reverse would be.
This certainly has been a strange year. The reckoning for these big unprofitable sites was inevitable in retrospect, but it's wild how much is happening all at once.