megane_kun

joined 2 years ago
[–] megane_kun@lemmy.dbzer0.com 12 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

I've had one of those (battery died, unfortunately) and if you'd look at its files, you'd notice that they are organized in a different structure than what an MP3 player might expect.

iPod_Control\Music's sudirectories might contain some songs, but the filenames are hashes (corresponding to the entry in the iPod db). The metadata and the contents are perfectly fine, and you can play the file yourself via a different player (you can probably test it in your computer).

I suggest you just connect the iPod through the 3.5mm output audio jack or find a 3.5mm audio output to Bluetooth transmitter adapter.


EDIT:

WTF. I triple posted. My bad. I deleted the two others, also corrected some minor typos and mistakes.

[–] megane_kun@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 month ago

It takes a lot of work and adjustment if you're new to tiling window managers. It takes time (and some skill, but that can be built over time).

[–] megane_kun@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 month ago

I only got to know this because of an XKCD comic.

[–] megane_kun@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 points 2 months ago

The Arch Wiki (and possibly other Arch websites, but when I checked I wasn't able to catch it) uses Anubis (https://anubis.techaro.lol/) to mitigate AI crawlers causing issues on their servers. Anubis works by making your computer do some computations before being let in. For users like you and me, it'd be a minor inconvenience, but for these AI crawlers, it'd cost them a lot of computation as they hit these sites a huge number of times.

Using Anubis is said to be a nuclear option, but as these AI crawlers don't care about that, sites, especially FOSS ones, started using it.

[–] megane_kun@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 2 months ago

The author lost me when they showed the terminal command to install Nvidia drivers on Debian. Yes, it’s one sentence. That’s still extremely daunting to the vast majority of computer users. It undermines the author’s own thesis.

I think it's just a consequence of the variety of ways a Linux distro can present its options and settings. It's far easier—and arguably, safer—to share a command than to anticipate how to get to a certain option or setting.

Just as an aside, I had this exact same problem when a friend asked me to do something on my system. I ended up having to send them screenshots of what I'm looking at in order to direct me to where I need to be. All that trouble could have been avoided had they sent me a command to run on my terminal.

Is it better to have a utility that a user can just click? Yeah! Someone can write a utility program that can do just that, I guess. But then again, the problem now becomes how the user can make sure this utility program is in their system.

I guess it can be a bash script? The user can download the script and then make it usable. It's a few clicks in Dolphin and (Gnome) Files, probably the same in Thunar, but we're back to the same problem: the variety of ways a GUI can take to the same end.

I highly doubt that Linux users, at least the ones who value customization, will want to lose that customizability in order to make things easier for Windows refugees and pull more of them in.

[–] megane_kun@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 2 months ago

It's from this comment somewhere else in this thread: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/comment/17995404

I just took the link there as well as other information from the other comments here and collated the information along with the description.

[–] megane_kun@lemmy.dbzer0.com 20 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I wanted to see what it is about other than the title. Thankfully, some of the replies here have given me where to go to get the info to make a decision before I watch the video.

Peertube mirror (thanks to @fxomt@lemmy.dbzer0.com):

Transcript (thanks to @itslola@lemmy.world):

Description (taken from the TED talk link):

“We are watching the collapse of the international order in real time, and this is just the start,” says investigative journalist Carole Cadwalladr. In a searing talk, she decries the rise of the “broligarchy” — the powerful tech executives who are using their global digital platforms to amass unprecedented geopolitical power, dismantling democracy and enabling authoritarian control across the world. Her rallying cry: resist data harvesting and mass surveillance, and support others in a groundswell of digital disobedience. “You have more power than you think,” she says. (This talk contains mature language.)

[–] megane_kun@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 3 months ago

Just for reference.

ISO 27002:2013 12.1.4

[–] megane_kun@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 3 months ago

IDK why, but I went in expecting someone rewriting the software for PS1 in Rust.

[–] megane_kun@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 3 months ago

I've played Simutrans on and off ever since the mid 2010's. I'm not any good at it, and usually play it without regard to a lot of its mechanics (especially managing finances), but I've spent countless of hours just connecting communities and cities with over-engineered roads, rail systems, ferries, and airplanes.

 

Some time ago, someone convinced me to try out Hyprland, and I've been working on this one ever since. It might look minimalistic, but not for the lack of trying.

Bare desktop with a cheatsheet widget on one screen and krun being used on the other.

Bare desktop with a launcher widget on one screen and a calendar widget on the other. The mouse is hovering on the lock desktop icon on the launcher widget sidebar area.

Browser window on one screen and swaync notification center on the other.

Browser window on one screen and on the other window, a terminal emulator, bmon, and htop.


Things used:

 

I've recently updated to Plasma 6.1 and I've loved it so far. However, there's one thing that has made things difficult for me—I can't get to ‘Panel Configuration’ and make changes to my panels.

This screen recording shows me failing to get to the ‘Panel Configuration’ in my top panel (though the same problem exists for all of my panels).

For further context, I use Plasma 6.1 with Wayland on Arch Linux. Some other details from the Plasma Info Center are provided below:

If there's any more information I need to gather in order to resolve this problem or make a bug report, I'd love to know.

 

As the title said, I customized my system according to what I liked. It's probably a mess of features and design elements cobbled together from the OS's I've used (or would like to use).

There's also some features I've customized that is hard to show via screenshots, like mouse gestures to move windows around different screens and virtual desktops.

I don't think I've achieved everything I want here, but it has gone way further than I've imagined it'd go.

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