teawrecks

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 3 hours ago

"Linear" is not a word I would use to describe it, hah. I'm pretty sure you can go back to the start, make different choices, and play another 70+ hours of content you've never seen. Which is even more insane.

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

Ah, gotcha. Yeah, it's always hard to know what really happened when dealing with this kinda stuff in the media. In this English version they say,

a Russian government official said...The official, like others, spoke on condition of anonymity due to concerns for personal safety.

Here's the Russian version of the article (which uses штурмовики) where they instead say,

a Russian government official explained to The Moscow Times.

So it sounds like they're not quoting a public statement from the Kremlin, but someone on the inside feeding information to this outlet. Allegedly. Could be that person's wording, or could be the outlet's "interpretation".

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

Thanks, good to know!

[–] [email protected] 8 points 10 hours ago (2 children)

The term predates star wars, if that's what you're thinking. Star wars got the term from actual fascist regimes. According to Google translate, they probably used the term штурмовой отдел.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

Ah, I guess I didn't know they didn't have the rights anymore. Tbh I played through AW2 and didn't connect that Casey was a reference to Max Payne lol.

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

Heh, does Astrobot count?

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

What do you mean legally distinct? You know that's Sam Lake, writer and creative director at Remedy, and face model for Max Payne 1/2, both also developed by Remedy?

[–] [email protected] 30 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Yeah, idk why everyone seems to legitimately think devs are going to just quietly revert back to usermode anticheat. I could see Riot patching an actual root kit before that happens.

But yeah, more likely MSFT will lobby for hw that is more annoying than secure boot or TPM to get working with linux, every windows app after that point will rely on it "because turnkey security!", and if you ever manage to disable it none of those apps will work on your machine in any OS (if they even worked through proton at all).

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 days ago

"I laugh in the face of ground faults!"

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

Oook, i was thinking at the instance moderation level, you're meaning at the software dev level.

U have two options: stop donating or suck it up and let them develop feature B.

Or fork it, add your own features, and don't break federation compatibility (activitypub? idk). But I guess we're talking specifically about features where that's not possible.

I don't know how well this would fare, because it sounds to me like you're replacing the dev lead position with a democracy/hivemind.

Like it or not, software development often follows the Pareto Principle (20% of the devs contribute 80% of the code), and IMO that happens because those 20% think of themselves as responsible for the direction of the project. They feel empowered to have a vision for the project and work towards it over time from their deep understanding of everything going on (because they are responsible for 80% of it).

I think you would effectively be subverting that position and developer mindset. No dev could ever feel that responsibility or empowerment because they aren't in control of the direction the software is going. They are at the mercy of the vote. They can't make changes with future decisions in mind because they don't have control. They might have implemented one feature completely differently if they had known the outcome of a future vote on a future feature.

Best case, people just listen to the devs expertise and let them do what they want. Worst case, the devs disagree with the outcome of a vote and the project, maybe forking it to make their own dictatorship, and a bunch of users will likely follow them.

That would be my main concern with the model, but who am I to say. Maybe it's never happened because it's inherently flawed, or maybe just no one has ever tried it. Or maybe it is happening right now somewhere and I've just never heard of it.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (3 children)
  • I assume this new platform still has instances (i.e. is federated), except that each one is somehow required (under the threat of defederation maybe?) to operate in this "worker-consumer coop" model? Or are we talking about some centralized organization that oversees all instances?
  • What prevents a Lemmy instance from trying this today? It sounds like this is something you want to try out?
  • What does the paid tier get you? What's the difference between the paid tier of this new system, and the donations model of Lemmy?
[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 days ago (5 children)

I think their question is, what do you mean by "secure"? Because as the saying goes for internet services: usually, if you're not paying, you're not the customer, you're the product.

 

I'm curious what people's thoughts are about Matter. This is the first I'm hearing of it.

I've been trying to find a way to replace my old Chromecast Ultra (because Google), but I really like having that little cast button show up in apps, even on the phones of guests. But from what I can tell, Google killed this functionality on open alternatives (ex. Raspicast) with a lockdown to the Chromecast spec.

I'm hopeful that Matter could be a way to have my devices cast streams to each other in a standardized way that wouldn't require me to rely on Google/Apple/Amazon/etc. Maybe even Newpipe could get in on the action?

I don't know how it will work, or if this "Connected Standards Alliance" (which is apparently used to be the ZigBee Alliance, also news to me) will still have to greenlight specific devices despite it being "open", which would rule out Newpipe. I would assume the official YouTube apps will be particularly resistant to supporting Matter.

Anyone have any experience here? Has anyone else successfully replaced their media device with something open that also works with the casting button in apps?

 

I'm trying to wrap my head around the pipewire ecosystem. I think it's great that we're getting a fully featured audio system with all the upsides of pulseaudio and jack, and none of the downsides (that I know of), plus a bunch of completely new features. However, I can't help but think it could have used a little more vision in its interface (or maybe just qpwGraph).

From what I've read, my mental model is that pipewire holds the graph, while a "session manager" manipulates it (create/modify/remove new nodes/ports/links/etc). That's fine. I also understand that wireplumber is such a session manager, and despite having a really convoluted config syntax, it does its job (I assume).

As a simpleton, though, I'm drawn to the wysiwyg interface of qpwGraph, but it's not clear to me how it's supposed to fit into pipewire's vision or how it interacts with wireplumber. It seems to render the current pipewire graph as it is, it can create/remove links between ports, but also it's not a session manager (right?).

I suspect that whatever I can do in qpwGraph I could also do using just wireplumber via conf files and the cli. But dragging my mouse between nodes is so much easier than learning a new syntax. But then I also don't understand what "Active" and "Exclusive" mean. I'm guessing that if Active isn't checked, it won't do anything at all, but if Exclusive isn't checked then...maybe wireplumber can override it? Does that mean if Exclusive IS checked it's able to override wireplumber (look at me, I am the session manager now)? Is that why, if I have a qpwgraph active that links VLC to both OBS and my headset, I hear/see a delay of the link to my headset when a VLC process launches? First wireplumber decides where it should link, and then qpwGraph modifies it several ms after?

I feel like it's currently not clear what qpwGraph is in pipewire terms, but it's also clearly the most intuitive way for someone to use pipewire right now. I think it would be best if qpwGraph was either a standalone, fully featured session manager (not to be used in combination with wireplumber) or just a front end for wireplumber rather than talking to pipewire directly.

Thoughts? Anyone else confused? Am I missing a piece to the puzzle?

 

Hi, I'm sure this is just a noob lemmy question. I saw on /c/[email protected] that there's a new YouShouldKnow community: https://sopuli.xyz/post/675270

But when I search for it through Sopuli, it doesn't show up, and if I use the ! link in the top comment, it returns a 404 from sopuli. It seems the sopuli server doesn't know about the community yet, how is it supposed to find out about it? Thanks

 
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