brownmustardminion

joined 4 years ago
[–] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 week ago

This is amazing. Thank you!

[–] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 65 points 1 week ago (5 children)

This is fine if the post is something insanely low effort.

But I do worry if this ends up being too aggressive.

One of the things that made reddit so awful is how over moderated it was.

I don't really take issue with dozens of posts by newbies asking the same basic question over and over. I used to be one and am occasionally back there again if I start a new hobby. Hopefully newcomers don't get pushed off by overly sensitive moderation.

It would be helpful if you could provide a hypothetical example of what is considered a "low effort" post.

[–] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 weeks ago

Unfortunately they can and most likely will considering how many people you email who use gmail or G Suite email domain services.

 

Does this or has this existed?

A site where users can post a bounty for a bug fix on something and others can contribute. If the bug is fixed, an arbitrator determines if the solution meets all of the parameters and rewards the programmer with the pooled funds.

Beyond bug fixes, it could be used to fund entire applications or even specific feature requests.

Companies or software packages could have their own official pages, with separate sections for bug fixes, feature requests, or even future versions.

Contributors can pledge an amount with a lifespan attached. If the bug or feature isn't materialized within that window it refunds their account. Otherwise the money is held in escrow until paid out.

[–] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 month ago

As someone who uses em dashes and refuses to stop because of AI slop, thank you for making me feels my brain are big.

[–] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I've tried close to a hundred various devices, both ZigBee and Z-wave, and I've never had an issue with a Z-wave device but many with ZigBee.

I still use them here and there (mainly Hue bulbs), but I prefer Z-wave whenever possible.

Another factor is ZigBee devices tend to respond much slower. Z-wave light switches are instant on/off when instructed whereas my ZigBee lights always have a delay between 1-4 seconds.

[–] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago

It's fairly universal throughout developed countries. Might be called something different than GFCI though.

[–] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (5 children)

This is something I've been eyeing for the same use case: https://www.getzooz.com/zooz-zen15-power-switch/

Ive had great experiences with Zooz products in general, but haven't used this one (yet).

It does also control, but I'm sure if it's anything like their wall switches it has a setting to default to ON.

EDIT: Didn't see the ZigBee part of your post. Adding a z-wave dongle isn't too difficult if you're open to it. ZigBee sucks IMO.

[–] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 month ago

True. Also in newer homes the GFCI might be at the circuit breaker.

Either way, as long as it's GFCI you shouldn't have any concerns.

[–] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

My success rate is 80% so I bought a cable tester. Lol

[–] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 10 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (6 children)

Your bathroom receptacles are protected by a GFCI safety mechanism. You can confirm by noticing if the receptacle has two small buttons usually stamped with "Test" and "Reset".

If the smart plug had a malfunction due to humidity (unlikely), the GFCI receptacle it's plugged into would instantly cut power.

You can toss a toaster in your bathtub as long as it's plugged into a GFCI and 99.99999% chance you would be totally fine. Don't try this at home.

 

An interesting reflection on how LLMs can manipulate vulnerable individuals into psychosis and how AI tech bros have also drank the koolaid.

[–] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 month ago

+1 for Amcrest PoE.

I also use a Reolink Doorbell PoE and it's better than any Nest or Ring doorbell, without the cloud bullshit attached.

My only issue with the amcrest is that they get bad IR pollution at night and are sometimes unusable. But that's apparently an issue with most dome cameras at night.

[–] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 10 points 1 month ago (26 children)

Personally I use other platforms for uncensored discussions.

Unfortunately they're filled with insufferable twats like yourself, but that's the price we pay for free speech.

It's obvious for everybody except for you, that Lemmy isn't intended as a free speech platform, but a means to form your own community based on shared interests and values. That inherently comes with some amount of censorship at the discretion of instance operators. I'm a free speech advocate, but I value and respect individuals' right to maintain their property (Lemmy instance) as they see fit.

If you want free speech, hop on Simplex where you can yell racial slurs until you've satisfied yourself.

Or spin up your own lemmy instance. I'd be happy to join and engage in some debates.

 

I wasn't a fan of HACS making a github account a requirement.

I understand the reasoning, but IMO it should be optional.

I've been getting by fine manually installing custom components, but some basic automation to this process would be nice., especially for updates.

Before I start on my own barebones addon for maintaining custom components, I figured I would ask around if any such thing already exists.

At the bare minimum an addon that serves as a frontend for git clone/pull plus moving the files into the appropriate folder. A bonus would be to display available updates with change logs attached.

The HACS searchable database is great, but I don't find it particularly necessary. Manually pasting a codeberg/github repo then clicking an Add button seems totally acceptable.

 

Running pfsense, I was able to route my entire LAN subnet through a VPN. I have firewall and NAT rules that use an alias to filter outgoing connections to specific domains outside of the VPN gateway.

This works great. But here's the problem. Wildcards are not supported within pfsense aliases, and therefore unless you know the specific subdomain for a service, there's no way to reroute services that use rotating or load balancing subdomains.

Surely this is a big problem in large companies. I'm sure they utilize a paid solution to solve this problem.

Are there any solutions for self hosting that are FOSS or within pfsense?

 

I know there's many questions about self hosted Spotify alternatives, but this one has a slight twist.

Does there exist a service or service stack that provides a single sign on web interface where friends/family can login to search for and download music, stream, and create playlists/share playlists (or even their entire library) with other users?

I've always used Spotify to an extent as a social network. Almost all playlists are shared with close friends, and we share essentially a unified library. I'd like to replicate this outside of Spotify.

Essentially what Immich does but for music, podcasts, and audio books.

Some type of iPhone & android compatible app would be necessary as well.

The ability to easily upload purchased music from bandcamp as well as download pirated music from something like soulseek would be needed too.

 

We all hate google and youtube, but overall as a community we're all simultaneously lukewarm and non-committal about pushing towards using an alternative. I admittedly cling to invidious frontends for dear life.

It seems like whenever somebody asks for an alternative to youtube, they're offered Odysee and Peertube, but inevitably many others chime in about the shortcomings of both of those platforms.

Can we as a community come to a consensus as to which of these platforms should be pushed forward?

I don't even think it needs to be a binary choice. Obviously youtube cannot be immediately replaced for it's archival of educational and tutorial videos, but we can at least push newcomers towards using invidious frontends for those instances.

Maybe Odysee is better for some type of content over Peertube. Let's discuss which platform works best for what and try to be more active about sharing and promoting them not just to viewers but potential creators as well.

If you go to share a youtube link, try to see if that video exists on an alternate platform first and share that link instead. I think that's a good first step towards getting away from youtube in the privacy community.

But youtube alternatives are still very much on the fringe and I'm hoping this post will at least inspire some discussion about changing that.

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submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml to c/piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
 

Are any of these services trusted? Would a private tracker lock your account as soon as they figure out you bought your way in?

And can anybody vouch for or against [redacted]?

Edit: pretty sure the site I asked about is a scammer so I removed it so nobody goes there. I had completely misspelled the tracker name when contacting them and they didn't correct me.

 

I'm trying to improve my spanish by watching my favorite films with spanish dubs.

Im having trouble finding these with the current trackers I'm on. I'd appreciate any help finding or joining a private tracker that does spanish language dubs.

 

I've been using an Amazon tablet with Fully Kiosk for a few months but it frankly sucks ass. Keeps resetting itself or kicking back to the Amazon home screen to name a few issues.

If money isn't a factor, what tablet do you think would be the dream choice for integrating as a wall mountable Hass tablet?

Fully Kiosk is a great app but still very hacky, so I'd like a tablet that doesn't require workarounds to keep it in kiosk mode.

I hate telemetry and spyware as well so I guest that puts anything Amazon or Google based out of the equation.

 

I noticed while updating my system just how many packages I have installed that I don't recognize.

I tend to think that minimalism is better for security, so I'd like to remove any packages that I'm not using, but this is a bit of a scary task.

Does anybody have a safe method for reviewing and purging unused or bloat packages while obviously making sure not to accidentally remove important dependencies?

I'm on arch btw.

 

I updated my nvidia driver to 570 and now some games that worked fine previously present the error: direct x 12 is unsupported on this computer.

I see lots of others having this same issue but no solutions.

Has anybody figured out a fix?

I'm on Fedora so there doesn't seem to be any straightforward way to rollback the driver.

 

I'm making my own white oak door jambs. So far I did one set. I milled some rough cut oak, made two passes through the table saw to roughly remove a rabbet for the integrated door stop.

Then I ran it through the table saw again with a dado stack to get the rabbet to the final dimensions. The problem is, it's difficult to apply even pressure as the wood passes over the dado stack. I already have a featherboard pushing against the fence, but I'm thinking I could use another pushing against the saw top.

I know I can put one on my fence, but that would apply pressure to the part of the board closest to the fence only. Do they make any contraptions that can apply even pressure downwards, but over a larger surface area? Like multiple featherboards extended out over the work piece.

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