TheChargedCreeper864

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Little update in case you were wondering. After the news of kernel 6.13 being out I decided to look up when that would be available on Fedora. I found some mentions of the display bug being resolved in 6.12.9, and it's true! Now my saga of switching a parent to Linux can truly begin!

Did you ever end up getting that Brother scanner to work?

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 weeks ago

The post was made in 2020. I think it's likely that this was a PC that already ran Windows 10, which probably auto-updated itself as they love to do

[–] [email protected] 8 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Instagram IIRC

[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

I've been living on Tumbleweed KDE for about a year now, and I love it. My mum recently got a new laptop, so I decided to make it a dual boot of Windows 11 LTSC (no Copilot or forced MS accounts) and Fedora KDE.

Apparently Windows doesn't ship with the relevant network driver built-in, so that was fun to hunt down while Device Manager didn't announce what network card was in there. The manufacturer's site lists a certain driver as the "latest", and that would "successfully" install without actually doing anything. Half an hour later, it turns out that pressing "more" on their website shows previous versions of the driver... and drivers for a totally different network card that also gets shipped with this laptop sometimes. Naturally, the hidden one worked first try. Most other drivers were borked too, so Windows Update had to fetch them.

I then got to set up Fedora, which I chose because from what I heard it's neither boring nor too bleeding edge, without Canonical's controversial Snap shenanigans and with some relatively easy enabling of proprietary codecs (which I still need to verify) and with okay package management through Discover. The network card and everything else worked perfectly out of the box, but I have never installed Fedora before and forgot to partition the drive in Windows beforehand. Eventually I finish the install, install some apps and do some updates (while feeling uncomfortable with having to guess how package management works in dnf). I'm finally done, shut the laptop, bring it down to show her, open the lid, screen comes on...

... and then it shuts off. Turns back on, flickers a couple times, then permanently shuts off. Turns out there's a kernel bug around display power saving that's causing this, and I don't know when the fix will land on Fedora.

It's been real fun trying to explain to her that I didn't just break her fancy new laptop every 15 minutes and that everything I did was just a conventional procedure that should be supported (I'm lying)

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago

Here I was wondering whether it was still 2024 for the guy who promised to buy it for everyone in the subreddit, lol

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago (10 children)

Having or liking pets. Pictures of then I can see the appeal of, but the living beings are annoying at best or downright scary.

Never grew up with them, was always silently judged for being afraid of my classmates' pets if I came over

[–] [email protected] 37 points 1 month ago (10 children)

This sounds solvable, doesn't it? Have the extension cable have a chip saying it can do X at maximum, then compare with whatever is to be extended and communicate the minimum of both upstream. Might not become a sleek cable-like design, but would extend the 240W cable with the extender safely staying at 120W

[–] [email protected] 21 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

This gave me a brilliant idea:

  • Everyone adds a clause to whatever license they use stating "any part of this software may not be used for war purposes of any kind"
  • We wait until software with these licences is spread across the supply chain of everything on Earth
  • ...
  • World peace, as no country would be legally allowed to wage war
[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Someone I know recently showed me that extension. I replied to them with "why bother with a browser extension, just paste the DOI into Anna's Archive and it'll show up 99% of the time" and showed it to them on their computer. It then showed a message along the lines of "you can access this file, but not here. Go to this site instead".

They were signed into their university account. As you use that extension yourself, do you know if that's normal behavior? I'm afraid the extension flagged this person at the campus IT department or something like that

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 month ago

There are stories making the rounds of a YouTube channel in his name with two videos. One was something along the lines of "if you're setting this, I'm already captured", the other was set to premiere but the account got removed before it was public

[–] [email protected] 16 points 2 months ago

Is it the case where they postponed the vote again because they anticipated it being turned down and needing to wait ages before being allowed to vote again?

If so, perhaps Poland could host the next vote, deliberately not postponing when it seems it's not going to pass. Maybe even start trolling and remove concessions that would've pleased other countries, forcing even more anti-votes and removing some risk of it passing unexpectedly (I don't know if that would be viable to actually implement though).

We need it to properly fail big time if we don't want to fear for our privacy every couple months

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I'm not one to buy Apple products, but I keep hearing amazing things about their M4 devices. Most of them come with quite some dealbrealers compared to the competition, such as soldered RAM across the board, and Apple proprietary storage on the Mini (which they just have to tack an Apple tax onto).

The iPad's pretty much the only thing they make where the competition shares most of the same drawbacks (especially if either self-repair is proven to work, or parts pairing gets banned in enough jurisdicitions). Most of the reason that I don't want one is that I don't want to move into yet another proprietary ecosystem.

So, ever since learning about the fact that Asahi Linux exists, I've been dreaming about an iPad that can run arbitrary OS'es just like the Macs. Imagine running something like Plasma Mobile or Phosh on an iPad, with full desktop apps being ready should you need them. I hope I get to see something like that someday, whether through an exploit, legislation or just Apple finally coming around.

Crap, I'm fresh out of hopium

 

From my very limited understanding of recent news, Trump's stance on the conflict is going to be decisive in how peace is going to be negotiated one he takes office. One of the probabilities is going to involve the outcome where Ukraine can't join NATO, which would risk Russia trying to take more of Ukraine in the future.

So, this is where my totally-not-stupid-whatsoever question comes in. What if NATO were to occupy Ukraine similarly to how Russia is doing (that is, without Ukraine really doing anything to provoke it) but, unlike Russia, doesn't do any actual war stuff. Just walk in, say "it's ours now ;)", and have Ukraine take it without there being a fight. Without there being any intention of actually changing anything. Just one day most of Ukraine's taken by NATO, business going on as usual.

If American negotiations were to conclude that Russia can only keep what it captured and Ukraine cannot join NATO, then only all of Ukraine that didn't get captured by Russia or NATO, say, 10km (just inventing numbers here) of land between the two's occupied territory would be prevented from joining NATO. That way, future Russia would "only" be able to capture a remaining "10km" (which is not how area size works, but hope you get the point) at most. The majority of the country would effectively have the NATO protection it wants (or, if I'm mistaken, replace NATO with any other military alliance Ukraine would want to join).

Now, seeing as this clearly isn't policy (it were, it could've been enacted during times where Ukraine was said to be gaining territory back rather than losing it again), I'm obviously missing something in this "analysis". That's where you come in, dear reader.

 

Came up with this late at night. Not while being anywhere near a laptop though.

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