suicidaleggroll

joined 3 months ago
[–] suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee 30 points 3 weeks ago (4 children)

Near the peak of the NFT craze I was gifted (as part of an initial mint) an NFT, which I turned around and immediately sold for $3k. Last I looked it was worth about $200. That's the extent of my experience with NFTs.

[–] suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee 19 points 4 weeks ago* (last edited 4 weeks ago) (6 children)

Don’t look at Backblaze drive reports then. WD is pretty much all good, Seagate has some good models that are comparable to WD, but they have some absolutely unforgivable ones as well.

Not every Seagate drive is bad, but nearly every chronically unreliable drive in their reports is a Seagate.

Personally, I’ve managed hundreds of drives in the last couple of decades. I won’t touch Seagate anymore due to their inconsistent reliability from model to model (and when it’s bad, it’s bad).

[–] suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee 4 points 1 month ago

If we find out “I do not consent” opts out, I’m fine with it.

That's exactly what it does. I got the prompt on my system, I said no, and it said ok and everything proceeded on like normal.

[–] suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee 13 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I believe it.

  1. Install Windows 11 on your old Windows 10 machine
  2. Discover that between the bloat, spyware, and default settings that keep resetting themselves, it's basically unusable now
  3. Wipe the drive and install Linux in its place
  4. Your system is now 3x faster than it was with Windows 10
[–] suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee 14 points 1 month ago (4 children)

I've always wondered - and figured here is a good a place to ask as anywhere else - what's the advantage of object storage vs just keeping your data on a normal filesystem?

[–] suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee 12 points 1 month ago

Also most people who have only used Windows, bought their computers with Windows pre-installed, where the manufacturer loaded a custom Windows image that already has all of their drivers installed and configured. So it's not just that they've never used Linux before, they've often never actually installed any operating system from scratch on any computer and had to deal with the setup process.

Not too long ago I was messaging with someone who kept complaining that Linux was taking HoUrS to get drivers configured and how it clearly wasn't for them because Windows "just works". Meanwhile I'm sitting there thinking of the last time I installed a Linux distro on a machine it took a few minutes to install the proprietary Nvidia drivers and I was done, while the last time I installed Windows on a machine it took ~4 hours to get all of the drivers loaded properly, including blacklisting the f*****g Windows Update utility so it would stop trying to replace my network driver with a broken version that kept taking down the network connection on the machine, and the insanity of having to update, reboot, update, reboot, update, reboot, update, reboot over and over again for half a day until finally all the updates are actually installed and running.

[–] suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee 4 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

We tried the first half and they all shot each other, mission accomplished?

[–] suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee 4 points 1 month ago

Agreed. I've also been very impressed with Perplexica (linked to a self-hosted LLM on Ollama). It ties into SearXNG and will perform web searches, dive into the results, and summarize what it finds. Not just the pages themselves, but the specific information on those pages that addresses your original questions, including references which link back to the pages that were used to generate the summary. It's easy to identify hallucinations when it links to the specific page where it got the information from (though I have yet to experience any hallunications with Perplexica yet).

[–] suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Syncthing could be used to replicate a directory somewhere, but that doesn't address backing up the phone itself (apps, settings, SMS messages, etc.). Only option I'm aware of is iCloud. You can connect the phone directly to iTunes on a computer and back it up that way, but that only works with a hardwired USB connection and can't be automated, so it's a non-starter for a regular backup system. Android probably has more options, I'm referring to iOS specifically here though.

[–] suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee 5 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Agreed, but most people don’t backup at all. Then complain very loudly when they lose everything and blame everyone else other than themselves. Saw it daily fixing people’s phones.

I'd love to back up my phone locally, if there was an option, but AFAIK there isn't, so I'm stuck. This is a problem with companies forcing you into their cloud ecosystem and removing your ability to bypass it and control things yourself. It's only getting worse.

[–] suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee 9 points 1 month ago

If your point is, "the climate changes anyway, humans will be fine", I strongly disagree.

If your point is, "once the Earth kills off all of those pesky humans, it will recover from this damage within the next ~million years and will ultimately be fine", I agree, unfortunately we won't be here to see it.

[–] suicidaleggroll@lemm.ee 5 points 1 month ago

Yes it's a common phrase. If an apple costs $2, and you have 10 apples, then you have $20 worth of apples.

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