Lemmy's gaining popularity, so I thought new people should see this.
  • bear bear 10h ago 72%

    Use lemmy.ml how you want to use it, and if you want to participate in other political leanings, go to a different instance. No one is really stopping you, and that's the whole idea of the fediverse. And there really isn't any value lost, because this isn't a "choose one and only one" situation. You've got all of the fediverse at your fingertips.

    Until you make the mistake of replying with the wrong kind of comment to the wrong sub, and get banned from the entire instance and lose the ability to post on many of the largest subs on this side of the fediverse. Or maybe they just see you out and about and decide to ban you on sight because they don't like what you said. There's nothing stopping that.

    Admin overreach and abuse is a major issue for the fediverse because it affects more than just the user in question. Admins of large instances get to decide who has access to the users and communities on their instances, and very often the users of the instance aren't even aware of the actions taken on their behalf. Mastodon recently implemented a notification for when blocks and defederation remove your follows or followers, and this is a great first step. Users deserve to know when they are impacted by decisions such as these.

    I love the fediverse and want to see it thrive, so we need to stop putting our heads in the sand on this issue. It's always discussed as if it's an issue with a few problematic instances rather than the systemic issue in need of a solution that is is. Admins need the tools to protect their instances from real abuse, but we need to balance that with the right of the users to know what's going on and not be unfairly deprived of the social aspect of this social media experiment, especially without knowing.

    8
  • dri.es

    The founder of Drupal posted recently about this self-hosted and completely solar-powered personal site he made, in Boston of all places. He describes the hardware, software, and the challenges he ran into while setting it all up. The site even includes automatically updating statistics about the system and battery. There's no backup or fail over, so if the battery drains due to cloudy or cold weather, the website will simply go offline for a while and he's fine with that.

    26
    2
    Nix is my favorite package manager on MacOs - Dreams of Autonomy
  • bear bear 1w ago 100%

    I have no idea how you're getting packages older than Debian. Unstable is a rolling release and stable has a 6 month release cadence with no LTS. Were you pulling from an old dead repo? If you followed an outdated guide, they probably linked you to an old one.

    I do agree that the learning curve is steep and the knowledge is nontransferrable though. In my case, that just encouraged me to unify all my systems onto NixOS at home. Not sure if that's a solution or addiction yet.

    3
  • OpenWrt One WiFi 6 router samples are now available
  • bear bear 2w ago 100%

    Seconding this, I do the same. It's a terrible sign that it took me longer to figure out how to successfully create VLANs and assign them to SSIDs in OpenWRT, which is a fairly simple concept, than it took me to learn basically anything about OPNSense, a vastly more powerful and complex tool.

    I appreciate OpenWRT for giving me FOSS firmware I can slap on my AP, and I certainly don't want to come across as entitled to the free labor of the developers, but it's just objectively not very good from a UI/UX perspective.

    6
  • End of an era: Nova Launcher's parent company lays off practically everyone
  • bear bear 2mo ago 100%

    I always come back to Smart Launcher. I grew up with category-based application menus on on PC, I can't stand having a giant unorganized app drawer. It's so cluttered and messy. I'm always surprised at how little mention it gets and instead everybody talks about these "minimalist" launchers that are literally just unorganized app drawers.

    1
  • Gov. Tim Walz doesn't own a single stock
  • bear bear 2mo ago 50%

    And of that 61%, only a third are directly investing. The rest get it as part of their compensation package for their work, which they can't benefit from without penalty until retirement. Additionally, it skews heavily by race. It's 66% of white families, but only 39% of black families and 28 percent of hispanic families. The amount invested follows similar trends.

    https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2024/03/06/a-booming-us-stock-market-doesnt-benefit-all-racial-and-ethnic-groups-equally/

    0
  • Gov. Tim Walz doesn't own a single stock
  • bear bear 2mo ago 94%

    Actually most of us work for a living and don't have the luxury of having enough money for investments to be practical in the first place, but I guess you can pretend it's necessary to get by if it makes you feel better about it.

    16
  • linux
    Linux 3mo ago
    Jump
    Lightburn laser cutting software is killing linux support.
  • bear bear 3mo ago 80%

    No that's true, open source is superior is proprietary

    3
  • linux
    Linux 3mo ago
    Jump
    Hyprland is now fully independent!
  • bear bear 3mo ago 85%

    "Let's remove the social element of our social movement"

    Great so what's left at that point, the free value FOSS provides to corporations?

    25
  • linux
    Linux 4mo ago
    Jump
    Is NixOS at the advent of an implosion? | Community inquiry on recent drama
  • bear bear 3mo ago 100%

    Criticizing people's past and current actions relating to the subject and bringing up their direct history relavent to the subject is not a personal attack, nor is it out of line to point out he does his to advance his political agenda within the project, which is why he got banned in the first place. All of this directly relates to the subject at hand.

    You know what doesn't relate to the subject at hand? Your random little "sjw gender terrorists" comment. But it does make it rather clear why you want to obfuscate the facts about Srid's history with the project, subsequent ban, and continued amplification of drama and general shit-stirring ever since.

    1
  • linux
    Linux 4mo ago
    Jump
    Is NixOS at the advent of an implosion? | Community inquiry on recent drama
  • bear bear 3mo ago 50%

    You made one reply to me whining that I attacked the person by pointing out his beliefs, and then made another reply to me about "gender terrorist SJWs". Do you just lack any form of self-awareness?

    0
  • linux
    Linux 4mo ago
    Jump
    Is NixOS at the advent of an implosion? | Community inquiry on recent drama
  • bear bear 3mo ago 50%

    I attacked his beliefs which is perfectly valid. You should critically examine the motives and biases of people who feed you information.

    0
  • linux
    Linux 4mo ago
    Jump
    Is NixOS at the advent of an implosion? | Community inquiry on recent drama
  • bear bear 3mo ago 93%

    You should know that the guy you cited in the second link, Srid, is a well-known right-wing shit-stirrer who is banned from basically all NixOS spaces because he cannot peacefully coexist. He literally gets up day after day with the seemingly sole purpose of fueling drama and causing problems. Don't take his opinion at face value, he wants to see the project burn down and this colors his interpretation of events.

    NixOS is going through a rocky moment for sure, but there's no indication it will implode currently.

    39
  • Developer posts secret key on GitHub, loses $40K in 2 minutes
  • bear bear 5mo ago 87%

    Incredibly funny story, incredibly awful website.

    6
  • Microsoft has blocked the bypass that allowed you to create a local account during Windows 11 setup by typing in a blocked email address
  • bear bear 5mo ago 83%

    That's where you're wrong, buddy. It's actually very easy to blame Microsoft for holding a decades-long desktop monopoly by pushing manufacturers to include Windows on every PC out of the box.

    4
  • Microsoft has blocked the bypass that allowed you to create a local account during Windows 11 setup by typing in a blocked email address
  • bear bear 5mo ago 94%

    People really be out here preloading their computer with viruses to get around Microsoft's latest bullshit instead of just using Linux, we ain't never gonna have the Year of the Linux Desktop

    17
  • Does the form factor between 3.5" and 2.5" matter in a NAS server?
  • bear bear 5mo ago 100%

    Whatever you get for your NAS, make sure it’s CMR and not SMR. SMR drives do not perform well in NAS arrays.

    I just want to follow this up and stress how important it is. This isn't "oh, it kinda sucks but you can tolerate it" territory. It's actually unusable after a certain point. I inherited a Synology NAS at my current job which is used for backup storage, and my job was to figure out why it wasn't working anymore. After investigation, I found out the guy before me populated it with cheapo SMR drives, and after a certain point they just become literally unusable due to the ripple effect of rewrites inherent to shingled drives. I tried to format the array of five 6TB drives and start fresh, and it told me it would take 30 days to run whatever "optimization" process it performs after a format. After leaving it running for several days, I realized it wasn't joking. During this period, I was getting around 1MB/s throughput to the system.

    Do not buy SMR drives for any parity RAID usage, ever. It is fundamentally incompatible with how parity RAID (RAID5/6, ZFS RAID-Z, etc) writes across multiple disks. SMR should only be used for write-once situations, and ideally only for cold storage.

    16
  • I just wanted the workflow, ok?
  • bear bear 5mo ago 100%

    I explained my reasoning and you made no attempt to engage with it and just asked a question I already answered in depth. I'm not sure what you want, but it's clearly not an answer.

    4
  • I just wanted the workflow, ok?
  • bear bear 5mo ago 100%

    Hard disagree. Everything you learn on Arch is transferable because Arch is vanilla almost to a fault. The deep understandings of components I learned from Arch have helped me more times than I can count. It's only non-transferable if you view each command as an arcane spell to be cast in that specific situation. I've fixed so many issues over the years using this knowledge, and it's literally what landed me my current job and promotions.

    Arch is why I know how encryption and TPM works at a deeper level, which helped me find and fix the issue a Windows Dell PC was having that kept tripping into Bitlocker recovery. Knowledge of Grub and kernel parameters that I learned from Arch's install process is why I was able to effortlessly break into a vendor's DNS server whose root password was lost by the previous sysadmin before me when everybody else was panicking. Hell, it even helps in installing other distros, because advanced disk partitioning is a hot mess on a lot of distro GUI installers, so intimate knowledge of what I actually need helps me work around their failings. Plus all the countless other times that knowledge has helped me solve little problems instantly, because I knew how it worked from implementing it manually. When my coworkers falter because the GUI fails them and they know nothing else, I simply fix it with a command.

    If you use Arch and actually make the effort to learn, not just copy and paste commands from the wiki, you will objectively learn a lot about how Linux works. If you seek a career in Linux, there's nothing I can recommend more than transitioning to using Arch (not Garuda, not Manjaro, Arch) full-time on your daily driver computer.

    Anyways, after about a decade I've recently switched to NixOS. Now there's a distro where the skills you learn can't be transferred out, but the knowledge I gained from Arch absolutely transferred in and gave me a head start.

    4
  • NixOS Foundation board: Giving power to the community
  • bear bear 6mo ago 66%

    ... Yes. You will have to behave like a civilized adult. If your opinion is that you shouldn't have to, then you are correct that I do not respect that opinion.

    1
  • Google Kneecaps Loads Of Very Big Websites After SEO Change
  • bear bear 6mo ago 100%

    I'm gonna keep it real with you, I'll take "weirdo CEO and optional AI tools" over "corporate entity so powerful that society has literally warped around it, whose primary business model is psychological manipulation" any day of the week. The other search engines are so poor at what they do that they're not viable options.

    1
  • discourse.nixos.org

    Eelco has agreed to step down from the NixOS foundation board. Over the next two weeks, a constitutional assembly will be appointed to draft a constitution to democratically govern Nix/NixOS.

    99
    29