Mechanize

joined 2 years ago
[–] Mechanize@feddit.it 24 points 1 year ago (1 children)

As a small addendum this - honestly amazing - post was the spark for the whole couple thing: Happy Thanksgiving! 23 Nov 2017

And to be precise, it was because of this image:

[–] Mechanize@feddit.it 57 points 1 year ago (4 children)

“One of the core requirements here, and this is really important, is for users for this to be opt-in,” says Brouwer. “I can choose whether or not I want to participate in being open to exchanging messages with third parties. This is important, because it could be a big source of spam and scams.”

Let me translate this for you: "We will make users hop on the most cumbersome, frustrating and inefficient way we can think of to enable interoperability. And making it defaulted to off will mean people using other apps will need to find other channels to ask for it to be enabled on our users' end, making it worthless.

And don't forget: we will put a bunch of scary warnings, and only allow to go all in, with no middle ground or granularity!"

Great stuff, thank you. I can't wait.

“We don't believe interop chats and WhatsApp chats can evolve at the same pace,” he says, claiming it is “harder to evolve an open network” compared to a closed one.

Ah, so they are going for the Apple's approach with iMessage and Android sms. Cool, cool.

I hope my corporate-to-common translator is broken, because this does just sound bad.

[–] Mechanize@feddit.it 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Let's go with a great classic:

PromptMade in ComfyUI

Model: SDXL Yamer's Anime
vae: sdxl_vae.safetensors

Prompt:

  • Positive: Masterpiece, A sad anthropomorphic sloth working in a cubicle, tie and shirt, elegant trousers, employee, frowning
  • Negative: text, watermark

Seed: 217690652583363

Empty Latent 1216 x 832, clip_scale 2.0

KSampler: 22 steps, 6.5 cfg; euler, normal

Overall a pretty vanilla generation.

[–] Mechanize@feddit.it 2 points 1 year ago

Yeah, but don't forget that they poked him with a sword! A special sword!

That must mean something!

[–] Mechanize@feddit.it 9 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

I like the idea of 24 years plus the possibility of an extension with a fee, or proof of activity, for another 12 years if the owner is a person.

If, at any point, the rights are sold, passed, or the owner is not a person (but for example a corporation or association) it should last 12 years from that time with an extension of 6, so the ability to sell your idea or give it to your spawns for a soft landing is not destroyed, but it can not be abused.

To further avoid abuse if it has already been extended before being sold it should last only 6 years without possibility of extension. So at most it would be 42 years for active and valuable things.

EDIT: To clarify, if it gets sold multiple times, the "timer" shouldn't be reset but keep ticking down from the date of the first transaction, or it would open the door to accounting shenanigans just to keep it alive and locked.

[–] Mechanize@feddit.it 39 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Yeah. GDPR should have been implemented as a mandatory part of HTML or even HTTP that interacts with a builtin browser feature.

Well, it kind of is. The Do Not Track header has recently seen a court win in Germany (source):

It turned out that the judge agreed with vzbv, ruling that the social media giant is no longer allowed to warn users it doesn't respect DNT signals. That's because, under GDPR, the right to opt out of web tracking and data collection can also be exercised using automated procedures.

And it is basically the same in California too Source

GPC is a valid do-not-sell-my-personal-information signal according to the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), which stipulates that websites are legally required to respect a signal sent by users who want to opt-out of having their personal data sold.

[–] Mechanize@feddit.it 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Give technitium a go, my woes diminished drastically with that.

[–] Mechanize@feddit.it 6 points 2 years ago

I used KDE with X11, an AMD card, and two different sized monitors for the longest time without any issues. It's pretty plug and play.

With Wayland I did try months ago and it just worked™, but I don't have a long experience with it.

Unfortunately, I've no direct experience with the touch integration.

[–] Mechanize@feddit.it 4 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

I have a Boox Nova Air which is still going strong after around 2 years, and honestly it's pretty good for writing. But I heard a lot of people having problems with updates bricking the device or receiving a bad unit and having an hard time returning it, if bought directly from them. I did not have to talk with support and I avoided the updates, so I can't say more about that. My experience is overall good with it.

I also have a Kobo Libra H2O that I think is nearing the 4 years mark, and is still going really strong. The biggest problem I had was that it asks for a kobo account during setup, thing that I really dislike. I don't know if it is still like that.

But, generally, if you want an epub compatible reader that you can mod (NickelMenu etc) and easily side load stuff to, with a kobo libra you can't go wrong. Even if, to be fair, I'm not up to date with the latest devices and company policies.

One note: the kindle format is pretty closed and all the stuff you buy from amazon is generally DRMed to hell, so it's not certain that you can pass it to other readers. Just avoid amazon's ebooks.

EDIT: One thing I missed: PDFs on the default kobo software are bad, the Boox default software for PDF is far better and - in my case - there's a screen size difference too that can make my opinion biased. Aside from that for pure book reading kobo is generally better, but you need to buy a protective case for it: there are a lot of cheap and good quality compatible ones.

[–] Mechanize@feddit.it 13 points 2 years ago (1 children)

You should add some mushrooms in it.

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