petrescatraian

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago

@F04118F Didn't see this lol

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

@[email protected] wrote:

EU-agnostic

Yea, that sounds more like it, indeed. However, they never miss the opportunity to blame Brussels for their own failures tho.

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

Well, they gotta pretend they're not the anti-EU, pro-corruption populist POS they are at home, I guess.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

@Fubarberry Thank you. This seems like it should be useful for my situation 😁 Do I need to go through the process of setting a root/sudo account for this?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) (3 children)

@Fubarberry I've started playing Cities:Skylines (the original one) again, and downloaded multiple mods from the Steam Workshop. It froze one day and I couldn't fix it in any way than to shut down my Deck. Every upgrades I did to that city were just gone.

Thankfully I managed to improve my public transit by adding more lines, more buses and changing some routes, as well as adding a few more metro stations as infill (sadly I have to redo all the metro lines all the time when I do this).

I play vanilla for now, as I want to make the most out of it without DLCs first. Then I think I will get the snowfall DLC in order to get trams going (as a European I don't understand why are trams, and partly even trolleybuses, hidden under DLCs but metros aren't, as in my country almost all larger cities have trams, yet only the biggest has a metro. But I digress).

[–] [email protected] 3 points 6 days ago

@Flatworm7591 I heard about libgen and sci-hub from my uni professors. Before that, I never knew anything about them.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago

@cron that is true, however Ukraine doesn't do the same stuff. They're relying heavily on drones and other modern technology to protect the lives of soldiers, and I think this is an advantage that Ukraine has over Russia. Man power will run out at some point for Russia if things go at the same pace.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 week ago (2 children)

@0x815 very good. The more it stays behind, the bigger of an advantage Ukraine can have on the frontline.

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

@alyaza Quite well 😁 Looking forward for a few employment processes, hope I get a positive answer to one of them at least.

I got into the rabbit hole of YouTube videos about iPods, iPod refurbishments, upgrade and other media players in general. It's so fascinating that there are devices designed just for listening to music, especially since even the old Nokia phones came equipped with music players or had music playing capabilities. In fact, I used my phone to listen to music even before getting a smartphone (yes, I know regular mp3 players were a thing, but it was much easier to view what you were playing on a regular color LCD screen with an actual UI). Even more fascinating is seeing people actually upgrading these devices with more storage, larger batteries and new capabilities like wireless charging, Bluetooth connectivity (to connect them to wireless headsets), even making them able to stream from youtube.com/watch?v=ZxdhG1OhVn….

In fact, I am surprised that as of speaking, in 2024, there is still a market for music players, some even being Android based and with Google Play Store access, so you could install Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal, YouTube Music or whatever you can find out there (be it a streaming service, music player or whatnot).

This, along with the fact that (as I said) I never owned a dedicated media player myself (none of the likes of an iPod at least), I think is what made me to pull an older phone out of the drawer and try to repurpose it as a dedicated media player myself. And so far, it has been a success for the most part. I don't know how will I use it outside my house in the real world (even inside the house as well, as I already have the bulk of the music on my PC), but it's just so fascinating. If you're interested, I can create a separate post on the DIY community so you can get some ideas.

[–] [email protected] 21 points 2 weeks ago

@user68k I think this will be the first GTK3 app that will have an actual options menu instead of a tucked away hamburger menu with options. I think it's gonna be interesting.

 

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[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago

@Powderhorn These have been the norm in my country already for quite a while FWIW, haven't tested if they change these prices often or not however.

 

euromaidanpress.com/2024/08/19…
Apparently it takes 2000 at minimum for them to give a damn.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

@clark Ugh. You could probably get away with multiple cloud storage services then, and mapping their folders to the music player of your choice. Also, use file types that are generally smaller in size for storing music (like opus or ogg). For cloud services, use the ones whose apps support Storage Access Framework so they can appear in the default Android File Manager / File Picker thing (you can also use something like Round Sync to access them all, and it does all the job for you). If you're willing to pay for cloud storage, then one single provider with 100-200 GB can also be more than enough for your music needs if you own more than just a few songs.

Then you can add the folders in your music player settings.

Edit: Don't forget to also backup your music somewhere in case something happens with your phone or your cloud provider(s)

 

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More of a showerthought, but still.

Yesterday, I just pulled out from the dead my opendesktop account and discovered that they are now offering multiple online services as well: There is GitLab, Mastodon and Nextcloud for pretty much anything you want. I, myself, am not a developer, so the most useful for me would be the latter two - specifically Nextcloud, where they offer a whopping (for me) 5 GB free storage.

I am not new to Nextcloud, as my Friendica node admin also provides a Nextcloud instance with some storage available, and the availability to increase it by mounting external storage sources, such as Amazon S3, WebDAV or even other Nextcloud mounts.

For note-taking, I am using Notable and keeping my notes in .md files, as this allows me to use just about any program I want to edit them on other devices (or switch from it seamlessly if I don't like it), but the way it works is to have a subfolder called notes on every "data directory" that you point it to. However, the Nextcloud notes app just wants to use the folder named in your default locale (in my case, it was called "Note")

So what did I do? I mounted the folder "Note" on opendesktop, as "notes" back on my node's Nextcloud server. On my phone, I do not have this issue, so I can use it with whatever name I want.

Now, I know I could simply use another note-taking app instead on my desktop, or just switch the locale on the other side. But I am sure there are plenty of use cases where a program just expects a certain folder to be somewhere, but you're unable to rename it there or use a different folder, so that is a welcome feature. And I now have the ability to access my notes both online and on whichever device I use, which is super handy.

Next-up, I plan to store some music there, as it also has a music app. Then I want to mount the folder as WebDAV on my phone, for foobar2000.

I just love Open Source 😁

Below there are some pics with the whole setup in action:

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