Fuzzypyro

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] [email protected] 12 points 1 week ago

Honestly this sounds like a bit of a pickle. If I were in your situation I would just use one of the cellular carriers 5g internets. I personally use a T-Mobile 5g internet hotspot with a fresh tomato flashed nether 6700 plugged into it. Then I basically do all of my networking from that. Latency is a fair bit higher (usually about 30-50ms) but upload is significantly better than spectrum.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 3 weeks ago

So fitting. Perfect timing to return from outer space…

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago

I didn’t realize it until I watched it over but that car legit just sat there and waited.

[–] [email protected] 35 points 1 month ago (5 children)
  1. Install watch on odysee extension.
  2. Make a odysee account
  3. Continue your normal habits of watching YouTube but being redirected to odysee when creators have posted there.
  4. hurt YouTube just a little bit.

I’m so sick of hearing that odysee is only a nazi crypto scam. That content exists on every platform but by shitting all over every option that comes out and then whining when YouTube does more anti user crap is just ridiculous.

You don't need to just use odysee. You can use YouTube for your recommendations then be redirected for the content. Eventually when recommendations are there it will be an easy transition for the majority of people but until then, at the very least don’t step on the face of a working competitor that has good intentions.

P.s. You don’t need to use the token, it was mostly just given to viewers and creators for free.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (2 children)

My girlfriend has been watching her friends dog while they are out of town and she sent me this recently. I can’t exactly remember the pups name right offhand which is sad because I went to his birthday party.. they had cake, a portrait on the wall and they actually made stickers of the dog for everyone.

Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade would be rad, the og was the first rpg I played and finished.

Thanks for putting this on!

 

I don’t think I’ve ever seen a place that sold monk fish processed so it kind of shocked me to see this whole monkfish in a supermarket.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 month ago

It keeps me up at night thinking of what could have been.

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

I wouldn’t say it particularly sucks. It could be used as a powerhouse hosting server. Docker makes it very easy to do no matter the os now a days. Really though I’d say its competition is more along the lines of ampere systems in terms of power to performance. It even beats amperes 128 core arm cpu at a power to performance ratio which is extremely impressive in the server/enterprise world. Not to say you’re gonna see them in data centers because price to performance is a thing as well. I just feel like it fits right into the niche it was designed for.

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

You make good points here for the beginner however there are better alternatives and solutions for basically everything you mentioned here. The biggest I want to address is conflicts on your system. Generally running servers on metal is just outright bad practice. Containerize. Always containerize. There are lots of great options. Docker, podman, Lxc, helm, flatpak.. hell. Snap if you must. Running servers on metal is generally is just asking for trouble unless the system’s entire purpose is for that. Also the cg-nat situation. Personally been behind it for a few years but it’s not a problem as long as you have a reverse proxy tunnel in place. Not a hard fix at all.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago (4 children)

For those who are saying just photoshop.

https://methodshop.com/photoshop-money/

Obviously you can just use other software but PS is the main choice for image editing. What they need to do is put legislation in place and it will make the biggest players implement this form of drm.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 months ago

They are deafening but usually they are very well insulated seeing as keeping servers cool is very expensive and extremely important.

[–] [email protected] -2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Just to elaborate here. You are describing one implementation of a blockchain that provides a cryptocurrency. Blockchain is literally just another form of a database. It’s just that it can contain traits that would allow the database to be shared and distributed unlike typical databases. Currently there are some companies that are utilizing blockchain for their inventory systems. They aren’t using any more energy than they would with a typical system. They are just doing it to keep an unchanging record of past transactions which helps with fraud and loss prevention.

P.S. Money laundering using a system that is publicly distributed and has every transaction involving usd paired with an ID, social security number and enough pictures of your face to make a 3D model is genuinely idiotic.

 

Here’s an awesome, unique and historic piece of pixel art. Don Joyce, the host of the radio show Over The Edge from San Francisco’s community radio station KPFA and a member of the culture-jamming art and music collective Negativland made this piece of art way back in 1985. This piece presumably depicts either himself as an alien running the radio show, or an alien as a fan taping and calling in to the show.

This piece is also unique in that it appears as though it had to be printed in multiple segments and combined together to create the full image that you see here. This is a photograph of the printed piece.

Over The Edge is a live improvised audio collage program performed by the surviving members of Negativland each week on KPFA, and it still airs to this day. Don joyce passed away a few years ago. You can listen live and check out the show’s archives at https://kpfa.org/program/over-the-edge/ and you can learn about Negativland at negativland.com

 

Here is a super impressive piece of early pixel art - it’s ‘4 Byte Burger’, by Jack Haege. This image was printed in the September 1985 issue of Amiga World magazine. In order to reproduce the image in the magazine it had to be photographed from a computer monitor. The image was actually displayed sideways, and then the photograph was rotated for printing in the magazine; hence why the scan lines are vertical instead of horizontal.

In 1985, Commodore International hired several top-notch artists to create artwork using their new Amiga personal computer. Much of that artwork was printed in their magazine, Amiga World.

view more: next ›