buffaloseven

joined 4 months ago
[–] buffaloseven@piefed.ca 2 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

Except e-bikes operate in many places that cars do not. Cars being an issue isn't an excuse for anarchy everywhere else. I've seen plenty of people on e-bikes driving 30+ km/h down a public pathway in a park; you won't see a car anywhere within 300 feet of this but it's a clear danger to those in the area.

And I'd hardly call a speed limit for a bike a "burden," and e-bikes have operated in a nebulous zone as mentioned above, they are motor vehicles.

Even if you had to get a plate and follow a speed limit, there are still a million reasons why people should get out of cars and onto bikes (e- or otherwise) to move themselves around.

[–] buffaloseven@piefed.ca 6 points 2 weeks ago

Snagged one with little trouble, but I was early -- checked at XX:57 and the sale had gone live already, and I had put the money for it in my Steam Wallet last week as I wanted as few failure points as possible.

These things don't usually work out for me, so I have plenty of sympathy for those who got hung-up on the ordering page or just came a bit too late. For myself, I'm quite excited and it seems like it could even be here by the end of the week!

[–] buffaloseven@piefed.ca 6 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Well, he called Greenland "Iceland" 4 times in a meandering, somewhat incoherent ramble of a speech.

[–] buffaloseven@piefed.ca 33 points 4 months ago (3 children)

Rather poetic less than 24 hours after Trump paraded out a map with American flags over Canada, Greenland, and Venezuela.

[–] buffaloseven@piefed.ca 0 points 4 months ago

Seems like suspension without pay would be reasonable. That said, I have no idea what Gimil’s charter or laws or like. Probably a part of civics I should brush up on.

[–] buffaloseven@piefed.ca 0 points 4 months ago (2 children)

7-day suspension with pay…so he, like, gets a paid vacation for having terrible conduct?

[–] buffaloseven@piefed.ca 7 points 4 months ago

This is fantastic. I'm not some Linux fanboy, but I am increasingly disillusioned that Microsoft cares to make Windows good in any meaningful way. Vulkan seems to be a far more efficient low-level graphics API compared to DirectX these days, and what's been coming out of Valve seems to support that idea: a lot of performance issues on Linux are solvable problems.

I'm writing this from my Steam Deck which has become a more than capable general use PC even on its limited hardware. I was planning on getting a Steam Machine, and this ongoing work Valve is doing only makes me more confident in using that cute little box as a full jump away from the Microsoft stack. I recognize that's not a viable option for everyone out there, but I'm excited to try.

[–] buffaloseven@piefed.ca 11 points 4 months ago

Great article. I've used my Steam Deck as a very capable desktop PC. I do about 85% of my work on an iPad I take around with me, but whenever I bump into more friction than I'd like with it, I just pop over to Desktop mode on my Steam Deck.

Flatpaks seem the future for Linux as they simply abstract away the dependency hell that can get less knowledgeable users in big trouble. Having used macOS/OS X for many years, user agents as an alternative to system daemons are familiar to me, but I didn't realize that SteamOS supported them; good to know!

I think that immutable operating systems are going to become more and more popular purely for the various security benefits that can come with them. Hopefully we continue to see the tools adapt to let us do more and more in user-space so we can get the benefits with few drawbacks.

[–] buffaloseven@piefed.ca 0 points 4 months ago

This is a good list. The reality is that at the end of the day, you have a really important question to answer: Do I want access to this outside of my home network?

If you don't, this can all be pretty easy; if you do, it gets significantly more complicated for most solutions.

Keeping it internal, it can be very simple: get Docker, fire up some containers of software you like, make sure you have your ports mapped properly and you're off to the races. You'll want to set up a system to make sure you're at least aware if new versions of your software are released so you can upgrade, and that you have a backup system in place for your data.

I have a few things I now run on my home network, including:

  • Homebridge - enables non-Homekit smart devices to be used with HomeKit
  • Jellyfin - Media sharing
  • Bitwarden (via the Vaultwarden fork) - Password manager
  • Forgejo - Code repository
  • Podsync - Convert YouTube channels to video Podcast feeds
[–] buffaloseven@piefed.ca 1 points 4 months ago

I see your point, but I also think that Steam is so much more than what your example gives. In your case, Steam also has Instagram built in, it has photography forums, it has low-level interfaces to standardize hardware control across multiple camera brands and types, it has a body & lens store, it offers additional software to aid in photo editing, and... and... and...

It's really an impressive accomplishment what Valve have done with Steam and the hardware/software in its orbit. And that's not even mentioning all the work that they've poured into the open-source community to make Linux a viable gaming platform. Yes, it serves them all in the end, but little of it is easy and it's all taken a lot of work over the years.

[–] buffaloseven@piefed.ca 1 points 4 months ago

Really, just get whatever peripherals you like. Don't expect to be able to do a lot of extra doodads since you won't be running any extra software to enable advanced features, so just get something you like that's comfortable.

I use the same keyboard and mouse I use with my primary computer: a Nuphy Air75 v2 keyboard and MX Master mouse.

[–] buffaloseven@piefed.ca 0 points 4 months ago (5 children)

I self-host Bitwarden and it's been great. Used 1Password back in the day but their shift to SaaS has made it expensive and bloated with a bunch of crap I don't care about. Made sure to set up a backup of the BW databases and auto-updating the docker image that it runs in. Set up secure access for my family, and even managed to host it for a couple friends.

Keepass has always interested me, but I haven't been able to figure out if there's a browser extension that supports accessing databases stored remotely as I use my passwords on a few computers I can't install applications on, but I can use extensions.

view more: next ›