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57 votes
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Japan Post launches 'digital address' system
31 votes -
End of 10: Replace Windows 10 with Linux
98 votes -
Intelligent Agent Technology: Open Sesame! (1993)
7 votes -
Closed captions on DVDs are getting left behind
14 votes -
MiniPC home server recommendations
Hello Tildes! I've been trying out a lot of open-source apps these past few months but I've always hosted them on a VPS. It's been great and educational so far. However, I started considering to...
Hello Tildes!
I've been trying out a lot of open-source apps these past few months but I've always hosted them on a VPS. It's been great and educational so far. However, I started considering to host my very own server on-prem so that my data is absolutely physically with me and nowhere else.
With that short intro, I'd like to say I'm in the market for a home server. I can install OS's, docker containers, etc. And that's how I managed to install Jellyfin, Immich, Paperless, Portainer, etc on my VPS right now.
What out-of-the-box miniPC can be good for someone dipping their toes in the home server scene? I feel like I might need the storage to be extendable somehow? And it must be able to stream music and video through Jellyfin.
The choices in YouTube videos are overwhelming that I keep jumping from saying "ooh I'll get that" to "oh wait maybe I'll get that other one".
I also am not very handy in terms of hardware so I would prefer something out-of-the-box (if possible). Maybe a max budget of 500? But around 400 euros would be preferred. (Edit: In EU also, if possible)
Thanks for reading! Hope to hear from you guys!
33 votes -
Duolingo is replacing human workers with AI
34 votes -
SFO Snowflake Summit meet up?
I expect a good chunk of us are in tech of some sort. I will be at the Snowflake Summit in SFO next week. Anyone else attending? We could coordinate a meet up at a local bar or something if others...
I expect a good chunk of us are in tech of some sort. I will be at the Snowflake Summit in SFO next week. Anyone else attending? We could coordinate a meet up at a local bar or something if others are around!
8 votes -
What open source software and hosting option to choose for livestreaming music performance
AFAIK there are three software options for such thing: Peertube, Owncast and Restreamer. If there's something else, please write, I will appreciate. Regarding hosting, I'm an almost total noob....
AFAIK there are three software options for such thing: Peertube, Owncast and Restreamer. If there's something else, please write, I will appreciate.
Regarding hosting, I'm an almost total noob. What I know is that I don't want big latency and I don't want to pay too much. I don't know what to look for and the best thing would be to have some options to try, e.g. some trial period (a day, a week?) for free/cheap.
I've already tried Owncast and Restreamer on webh.pl VPS . Looking e.g. at requirements it seems that no huge machine is needed. However, latency was enormous, about 30 seconds, on both softwares.
What affects the latency the most and what would you recommend to try? Is VPS enough, should I aim for something else?
[edit]
I stream from Europe, if it changes anything.8 votes -
Introducing a unified future for app updates on Windows
21 votes -
New York Times, Amazon unveil AI content licensing deal
10 votes -
Help me understand vim motions
I use vim on remote servers or on my machine to edit single files. I, however, use it in a very basic sense, I do not use any vim motions. I enter edit mode, I change what I need to change, exit...
I use vim on remote servers or on my machine to edit single files. I, however, use it in a very basic sense, I do not use any vim motions. I enter edit mode, I change what I need to change, exit edit mode and save and quit, that's it.
Recently, I've been looking for alternatives to Visual Studio Code as Microsoft is starting to push Copilot very heavily and while I could use a cleaned up fork, the other concern is with more and more essential extensions becoming closed source and subject to Microsoft's licensing. And vim is a text editor that pops up over and over when I ask for recommendations.
A few days ago I've listened to No Boilerplate's Writing at the Speed of Thought which brings up a point about vim and vim motions being designed around the human body and how "editing by letters is extremely unnatural ... [and] extremely ill-suited to our nature".
That just doesn't sit well with me and may be the reason why vim never fully clicked with me. For context, I've been using computers in some capacity since a very early age, so perhaps the 'unnatural' way I've learned is so ingrained that I just can't make the switch, maybe I just think about things in a way that is more computer-centric just due to that as well.I am still on my quest to replace VSCode and I would love to make a switch to something that's less attached to a single corporation that can pull the rug from under me at any time. A part of that quest I guess turned out to be trying to understand vim and maybe finally making it click for me, so I turn to the wonderful community of Tildes for help :)
Thank you
22 votes -
Do something cool on the web and offer it to the world
21 votes -
Is there a sane way to use Git as a glorified sync tool?
I am not a programmer nor am I in IT, but I like to use some of the same tools they use. I use Emacs for writing fiction and I like it a lot. One of the packages I use with Emacs is...
I am not a programmer nor am I in IT, but I like to use some of the same tools they use. I use Emacs for writing fiction and I like it a lot. One of the packages I use with Emacs is
git-timemachine
, which allows me to visualize all the previously commited versions of the file I am currently working on. It serves as a very good and very reliable undo system. All my writing is on a private repo on Github. My usage is so simple and basic, Git/Github only serves as a kind of backup and undo (I know Git is not a backup, so I regularly download my repos as zips and send to OneDrive as an extra. They are also always available offline in the machines work, of course).The problem is, sometimes I work on different machines, and sometimes on different operating systems on the same machine (via dual boot). So I would like to know if there's an easy way to always "sync" the local mirror I am currently working on with the latest changes (also making sure that all changes are pushed). Essentially, I am asking if I can make Git work like Dropbox or OneDrive by automatically accept changes as long as they are the most recent version of a file. I do not wish to go through diffs approving every single change.
I understand I could use something like rclone for that, but their
bisync
feature is still very new and not considered reliable. Also, I already use Git and it is good for me. So I would prefer not adding an extra piece to the puzzle.I am familiar with cron, have an elementary understanding of shell scripts, and can follow instructions.
So, can Git do the job?
28 votes -
The era of the business idiot
36 votes -
Mozilla will shut down Pocket and Fakespot
71 votes -
Large Language Models are more persuasive than incentivized human persuaders
14 votes -
Have a hard time letting go of old tech?
Was rifling through a drawer looking for a printer cord and came across my old school calculator. This Sharp Elsimate 201 was my pride and joy. I think I got it in junior high so about 1975. And...
Was rifling through a drawer looking for a printer cord and came across my old school calculator. This Sharp Elsimate 201 was my pride and joy. I think I got it in junior high so about 1975. And for a 50 yr old calculator it still does exactly what it should.
Then I realized how much old tech I have that I have an emotional attachment to. I still have a Mac Plus and a Mac SE as well as an Imagewriter dot matrix printer and about a hundred 3.5" floppies sitting in a closet. I loved the first time I tried a Mac after the frustration of using DOS on a 286 PC. It just seemed like light years of improvement to actually use a mouse and playing with MacPaint was magical. I sometimes got chided for being a Mac evangelist at university and many people thought Apple would be crushed by Microsoft - looks like they're doing just fine.
My Marantz stereo is about the same vintage, mid 70s, and the Yamaha speakers still sound as good as the first day I fired them up. That stereo was built back when 22 watts per side was actual output and its loud enough to shake the walls. None of this "300 watts" fakery that came along when boom boxes became a thing. Plenty of distortion and zero fidelity is easy, quality sound takes quality engineering.
What have you got laying around that you just dont want to get rid of?
35 votes -
Highlights from the Claude 4 system prompt
25 votes -
Introducing Claude Opus and Sonnet 4
18 votes -
How Big Tech hides its outsourced African workforce
16 votes -
Request for KVM!
Hi, all. I'd like to ask for a lazy recommendation. I last bought a KVM maybe 6-9 months ago and I returned it because of audio interference as well as low refresh rates on one operating system....
Hi, all.
I'd like to ask for a lazy recommendation. I last bought a KVM maybe 6-9 months ago and I returned it because of audio interference as well as low refresh rates on one operating system.
Ideally, I'd like the KVM to support:
- 1-2 4k monitors over either HDMI or USB-C at a minimum of 120Hz
- 1-2 USB-C peripheral ports
- 1-2 USB-A peripheral ports (presumably we're still at 3.1?)
- audio via 3.5mm
- RJ-45 @ 100 or 1000 Mbps
- a physical button to swap between inputs
For the most part we're talking about swapping between a MacBook Pro and a Windows Desktop. I would love if I could also include my Mac Studio in.the cycle of devices but I absolutely understand If I can only have two.
I hope you're all alright with me flippantly asking for a recommendation! I'm not a KVM expert. I spend my time elsewhere. I was really annoyed at the low performance of the previous KVM I bought. I hope there are folks on Tildes that can rave and rant about their KVM preferences. Thanks folks!
14 votes -
So how do I know my passwords are safe?
11 votes -
Blurring and unblurring images
26 votes -
Chicago Sun-Times prints summer reading list full of fake books
42 votes -
Unexplained electronic components found in imported equipment for Denmark's energy supply network – investigation underway to learn more
32 votes -
What was your favorite older social media site/app? What did you like or dislike?
+1 for slashdot, mainly because of intelligent topics and conversations about science, technology, scifi, games and all that fun stuff. Community participation and quality discourse made it...
+1 for slashdot, mainly because of intelligent topics and conversations about science, technology, scifi, games and all that fun stuff. Community participation and quality discourse made it interesting.
Everything on popular social media "out there" now is about click bait and sound bites, even comments and replies. Posts (and communities) are reduced to nothing more than grabbing a few seconds of attention.
69 votes -
Sam and Jony introduce io | OpenAI
15 votes -
Hit hardest in Microsoft layoffs? Developers, product managers, morale.
35 votes -
We did the math on AI’s energy footprint. Here’s the story you haven’t heard.
23 votes -
YouTube’s new ads will ruin the best part of a video on purpose
60 votes -
What is the current state of Linux on phones?
I use Android and I don't like and I suspect I would like ios about that much. The sw practices and manufacturer behavior is not what I would call exemplary. Compared to the desktop the mobile os...
I use Android and I don't like and I suspect I would like ios about that much. The sw practices and manufacturer behavior is not what I would call exemplary. Compared to the desktop the mobile os landscape is locked down without much choice.
I have personal experience only with Pinephone released around 2020 which I used for about a year with postmarketOS for most of that time. I finally replaced it due it low battery endurance and call reliability with sleep due to inflexible requirements on that front but I actually liked it more that the Samsung I use now.
Other than that I only know about Librem 5 released around that time. Are there any recent examples of phone hardware that is meant to run a linux distro and what do you think about the future of that?
31 votes -
Observation: Video links go unwatched
Opinion Video links go unwatched. This gets even more true the longer the videos are. I think it helps to post a 2-3 line summary of what people can expect to find in the video. There is just too...
Opinion
Video links go unwatched.
This gets even more true the longer the videos are.
I think it helps to post a 2-3 line summary of what people can expect to find in the video.
There is just too much content in the Internet for many people to watch a video, just because it is posted, even if it has an interesting title.
55 votes -
I don’t care whether you use ChatGPT to write
25 votes -
Edit, new Microsoft CLI editor
22 votes -
They paid $3,500 for Apple’s Vision Pro. A year later, it still hurts.
26 votes -
Introducing Codex [OpenAI]
23 votes -
What we in the open world are messing up in trying to compete with big tech
19 votes -
Grok’s white genocide fixation caused by ‘unauthorized modification’
51 votes -
What's the deal with sites that ask if you want to sign in with your password or an emailed code and then after you use your password, they still email you a code?
I'm all for two-factor authentication, but what's the point of asking?
20 votes -
What self-hosts PHP-type based projects do you love or at least find useful?
I've seen some discussion on self-hosted stuff, but a lot of it depends on docker or droplets or some such. As a user of dedicated servers and the shared hosting environment on them, although...
I've seen some discussion on self-hosted stuff, but a lot of it depends on docker or droplets or some such.
As a user of dedicated servers and the shared hosting environment on them, although Virtualmin gives me much more freedom than cPanel did, I still can't run a lot of the fun stuff I want to play with.
So I'm curious to know what you run in that sort of environment that's awesome.
Although I will start with one: NextCloud has been around for a while - taking over from whatever-Cloud they forked from that I've now forgotten the name of. heh. It was not a bad project, but it really wasn't featured enough for my needs.
But recently, I've discovered that they have been expanding their features rapidly. What I love and use:
- NextCloud Talk is almost on par with Teams. Featureful chat. Shared files. Links to various things on NextCloud.
- With the local app installed, syncing a folder to the server, I can edit files locally or in the browser and it's a really nice synced environtment. The web view works well, almost like File Explorer - dragging and dropping files around, etc.
- Ability to share files publicly. And even the ability to have a chat with users visiting the file page if you want. Ability to "hotlink" shared pics - like to embed in a forum
- The "Cards" app is... I forget the original name for teh layout, but you get cards in lists. Cards have details, due dates if you want, things like lists you can check off items, embed pics, etc. Also, each card has a chat related to that card and you can @ people
- Passwords app - share passwords with certain people, click to opy to the clipboard. Storing credit cards means I can copy-paste easily to use on my phone instead of typing.
- Calendar that can sync to other sources
- Tables - lke Microsoft Lists - custom set up of columns, handy for any number of things from making a ticket system / issue tracker, to lists of resources for a particular site. Can ahve edit access, or make it into an "app" where it gets stuck up on the nav bar and view-only for your clients, for example
Basically, while there are still some rough spots, it is really pretty slick and works well. And the awesome part is that being self-hosted, I control it. There's a large number of apps you can add to it, of varying quality.
So I'm curious to know what other projects you love and find useful! :)
12 votes -
Will the humanities survive artificial intelligence?
28 votes -
Software engineer lost his $150K-a-year job to AI—he’s been rejected from 800 jobs and forced to DoorDash and live in a trailer to make ends meet
34 votes -
Two unrelated stories that make me even more cynical about AI
I saw both of these stories on Lemmy today. They show two different facets to the topic of AI. This first story is from the perspective of cynicism about AI and how it has been overhyped. If AI is...
I saw both of these stories on Lemmy today. They show two different facets to the topic of AI.
This first story is from the perspective of cynicism about AI and how it has been overhyped.
If AI is so good, where are the open source contributionsBut if AI is so obviously superior … show us the code. Where’s the receipts? Let’s say, where’s the open source code contributions using AI?
The second story is about crony capitalism, deregulation, and politics around AI:
GOP sneaks decades long AI regulation ban into spending bill
On Sunday night, House Republicans added language to the Budget Reconciliation bill that would block all state and local governments from regulating AI for 10 years, 404 Media reports. The provision, introduced by Representative Brett Guthrie of Kentucky, states that "no State or political subdivision thereof may enforce any law or regulation regulating artificial intelligence models, artificial intelligence systems, or automated decision systems during the 10 year period beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act
I saw these stories minutes apart, and they really make me feel even more cynical and annoyed by AI than I was yesterday. Because:
- In the short term AI is largely a boondoggle, which won’t work as advertised but still humans will be replaced by it because the people who hire don’t understand it’s limitations but they fear missing out on a gold rush.
- The same shady people at the AI companies who are stealing your art and content, in order to sell a product that will replace you, are writing legislation to protect themselves from being held accountable
- They also are going to be protected from any skynet-style disasters caused by their recklessness
28 votes -
Twilio denies breach following leak of alleged Steam 2FA codes
18 votes -
Every tech YouTuber is talking about the Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge now, so here’s a TLDR
They all released videos at almost the exact same time, so even though I don’t care, I was made to care. Therefore, I’m inflicting that same pain on you. You’re welcome. Mrwhosetheboss made a good...
They all released videos at almost the exact same time, so even though I don’t care, I was made to care. Therefore, I’m inflicting that same pain on you. You’re welcome.
Mrwhosetheboss made a good point saying that the target audience for this thing are rich people who want phones that look flashy and can pay for them, but don’t care that they have worse specs than the less flashy ones at a similar price.
MKBHD called it the “S25 Ultra Lite”, which I thought was funny. He also brought up the issue of cooling. He additionally said that no one is asking for thin phones, although it seems that Apple has also bought into the idea that people want this, since it’s rumored that they want to release a thin iPhone this year.
Dave2D said that he tested the heat dissipation capacity of the phone and that it can handle itself well. Apparently it still somehow has a vapor chamber inside of it, as well as a wireless charger. Apparently it also has the smallest battery in the lineup, even though it doesn’t have the silicon carbon tech that is all the rage now. He made a good point though, namely that this could just be Samsung starting the trend so that the technology matures in a few years’ time.
All three of them mentioned that everyone uses cases these days, which immediately kills the whole purpose of buying a thin phone and losing out on better specs.
If you somehow have not gotten enough of tech YouTubers acting confused over Samsung launching a product that no one asked for, there’s also Techaltar and Tech Spurt. I recommend the latter for dirty British humor.
32 votes -
The (not so) futuristic technology of “Lazarus”
12 votes -
Some ChatGPT users are developing delusional beliefs that are reinforced by the large language model
53 votes -
Unexplained drones, UFOs and the state of the US Navy
10 votes -
How I setup the open-source paperless-ngx to manage documents
23 votes