Nimrod

joined 2 years ago
[–] Nimrod@lemm.ee 8 points 11 months ago

And for everyone out there diving into the insane amount of “documentation” out there

“Tek” is simply shorthand for “technique”.

[–] Nimrod@lemm.ee 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Damn. That’s the dream.

[–] Nimrod@lemm.ee 2 points 1 year ago (3 children)

$40 per YEAR?? What magic gym is this you speak of?

That’s the cheapest gym membership I’ve ever heard of.

[–] Nimrod@lemm.ee 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Craigslist or Marketplace. Get a 90s mountain bike in your size. Start riding. Join a cycling club/social group. People are always changing bikes, and would be happy to let an older one go for a decent price.

It CAN be an expensive hobby, but it doesn’t have to be. I’ve been riding my $200 Craigslist special for about 1200km this year and I haven’t spent a penny on it.

Bike co-ops exist too! Check your area

[–] Nimrod@lemm.ee 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Gonna need a source for that claim on higher inputs for human food.

If economics is your excuse for raising animal feed instead of human food then it’s just another knock on capitalism. (Although if you calculated the economic cost of raising/slaughtering/shipping all that meat, I’d wager it’s not cheaper than growing plants for humans to eat)

Also, we farmed animals in the past because they are a good storage for calories when it’s winter and you can’t grow food. We live in a global society now. It’s not necessary. Animals are grown and killed because their meat is pleasurable to eat; simple as that.

[–] Nimrod@lemm.ee 2 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Yeah, alfalfa is the correct translation. I tried to do a quick search for how much land is used for forage crops (like alfalfa and hay) but didn’t come up with any decent stats. However, I looked for the global crop production stats and the top 4 globally are sugarcane, corn, rice, and wheat. These 4 contribute almost 50% of total arable land use. On the graphics for production— forage crops don’t even get an honorable mention. So unless you have some info on how much wasted land alfalfa grows on, I’m going to say it’s not all that important (land use wise)

Second, using different cultivars for animal feed and direct human consumption is true. We don’t eat dent corn. We eat sweet corn. Two very different varieties. However, saying that one variety can be grown on this patch of land and the other varieties cannot is simply false. Yes there are differences in adaptability of different varieties, but they aren’t massive. Especially when you read about how much fertilizer and water we dump on our animal feed crops each year. Any damn plant could grow with those kind of inputs.

And lastly, your “appeal to tradition” argument is a classic logical fallacy. So I won’t try to refute it.

[–] Nimrod@lemm.ee 4 points 1 year ago (9 children)

This is weapons grade copium.

The main ingredients in almost all animal feed for industrial farming (90+% of meat production) is grain/cereals. Like corn, wheat, oat, etc. humans eat those things. The protein sources for animal feed is usually soy… humans eat soy.

Please explain why “the soil we use for growing animal feed is not suitable for growing human food”

The only factual part of your comment is about your grandmas chickens eating food scraps. But I’ll bet you they didn’t live entirely on scraps. They still get grain to survive. Also, as stated before, 90%+ of meat doesn’t come from sustainable grandma’s chickens. It comes from hell on earth factory farms.

[–] Nimrod@lemm.ee 0 points 1 year ago

Certified banger. PE and Brother Ali? On a ‘no kings’ Saturday?? Yes please.

[–] Nimrod@lemm.ee 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Would syncing your backup directory work? Like take snapshots of your system, dump the snapshots all in a single directory, and sync it to an off-site location?

[–] Nimrod@lemm.ee 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Nah, he’s a duck. Ducks are feathered bags of pure rage.

But he’s handsome and talented, so it’s all good.

[–] Nimrod@lemm.ee 7 points 1 year ago (3 children)

That there is Nigel. He turned 5 this April.

[–] Nimrod@lemm.ee 55 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (8 children)
 

UPDATE:
I did not find where DOODS2 or any other add on stores any info, but I did discover that you can simply create a directory in the /share/ and point to it. I created /share/doods/ and added my .onnx model and got it to work. The model needs work, but I believe it is actually my model now.

I recently installed DOODS2 for doing some image analysis stuff using my cameras. And a friend and I are working on a custom model based on YOLO, but using my collected training data. The model is trained, and it works pretty damn well when you just send images at it. So I want to deploy it in DOODS2. The documentation is pretty good for what you have to do: just move your model into the 'models' directory inside DOODS, and add a stanza to the config.yaml...

problem arises when you can't find the damn 'models/' directory!!! All of the documentation is saying it should be somewhere, but I can't find it anywhere... come to think of it, I can't find where ANY of the add-ons are storing data. I guess this is the main argument for running HA as a docker, and all your add ons as individual docker containers. But I'm too deep in the weeds already with the supervisor install in Proxmox that I'm not looking to overhaul the whole system just to add a custom model to my image analysis!!

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

places I've already looked:

  • /config/
  • /config/doods (doesn't exist)
  • /mnt/data/supervisor/addons/data/ (also doesn't exist, none of those directories. Literally nothing in /mnt/)

I can't use the "docker" command to find the container, because HA claims docker doesn't exist. I'm feeling a bit lost.

 

Okay, I am super new to tiling windows managers, and let me just say - Sway made me an instant convert. I'm obsessed. But I still have no clue what I'm doing.

So I have been trying out every status bar I can to see what looks good, what feels good, and what has the best efficiency for some of my SUPER low-grade hardware.

This brings me to yambar. It is touted as the most resource efficient status bars, and because I only want to see a few things (battery, ram, cpu, volume, time/date), I figured it was a good fit. I downloaded and installed it (used AUR) and I had a few issues getting it installed, but eventually go there. (I should probably say right now that I'm also new to Arch. All my previous Linux experience has been Debian based.)

So now that yambar is installed, I snagged the example config.yaml and moved/renamed it to ~/.config/yambar/config.yaml. Now most of the previous status bars I've been trying required you to add/change something in the ~/.config/sway/config to make them go. usually in between some bar:{status_command }. So I went ahead and tried to add status_command /usr/bin/yambar in there, and I just got errors.

I've read the documentation on yambar's codeberg like 100 times, and there isn't anything in there about how to actually activate this darn bar. I'm guessing I'm missing something totally noob.

Help?

(ps- love the community. Subscribed immediately.)

 

I want to get my partner a replacement for an aging chromebook. I was thinking it would be easiest to just grab another super budget chromebook and call it a day. But the more I read about google and chrome, the less I want to do with them.

So my goal is to snag a cheap ($300ish?) laptop that I can slap Linux on (probably mint, but I’m open to suggestions).

The main caveat is the size- needs to be small. Current chromebook is 11.5” I think. I’d like to keep it under 13”. The main use (95% will be web browsing/streaming/email/bullshit) but I’d like it to have enough juice to play Minecraft on my local server.

I’ve looked around a bit, but my god there is a lot of options. I’d love it if there was just a recommendation that was proven to work. I’m busy enough tinkering with all the other tech, and I’d like to just set this one up and forget it.

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