[-] sevon@lemmy.kde.social 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

If you want to call it a fault. One instance can't cover all, just the slice its users interact with.

[-] sevon@lemmy.kde.social 2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Blaze screenshot it at lemmy.ml.

[-] sevon@lemmy.kde.social 5 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

The number shown is how many posts or comments your instance is aware of. If your number is smaller than the real one, it means that there's content that doesn't exist on your instance.

The missing content is either:

  • Old: The account is like 3 or 4 years older tham your instance. Old content doesn't get federated unless someone deliberately asks for it.
  • Posted in communities that no one at your instance has subscribed to them yet. This stuff also doesn't get auto-federated.
[-] sevon@lemmy.kde.social 5 points 2 weeks ago

I'm sure counter strike would be a decent option

[-] sevon@lemmy.kde.social 34 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

I was vaguely aware that some ancient architectures had weird byte widths, but I did not know about this. Pretty interesting.

This paper cannot succeed without mentioning the PDP-10 (though noting that PDP-11 has 8-bit bytes), and the fact that some DSPs have 24-bit or 32-bit words treated as "bytes." These architectures made sense in their era, where word sizes varied and the notion of a byte wasn’t standardized. Today, nearly every general-purpose and embedded system adheres to the 8-bit byte model. The question isn’t whether there are still architectures where bytes aren’t 8-bits (there are!) but whether these care about modern C++... and whether modern C++ cares about them.

[-] sevon@lemmy.kde.social 17 points 1 month ago

The file is named Cargo.toml. Whatever dependencies you add to there are automatically downloaded by Cargo. You can manage them with cargo add and cargo remove.

cargo install is not the same thing. That installs binaries. I last installed cargo-release to automate the annoying part of managing git tags and crate version number.

[-] sevon@lemmy.kde.social 6 points 1 month ago

?

I censored the url.

[-] sevon@lemmy.kde.social 17 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Yeah, I saw that one. Actually kind of a smart idea as many people will surely blindly press the keys as instructed.

[-] sevon@lemmy.kde.social 22 points 1 month ago

It's a fake website

Figured as much. So it's ad spamming that they're going for.

215

it also kept redirecting to itself like twice a second to not let me go back.

[-] sevon@lemmy.kde.social 5 points 1 month ago

Hey that looks nice at a glance. Will check it out!

[-] sevon@lemmy.kde.social 2 points 1 month ago

I've been using mega synced folders for most stuff. Works fine.

[-] sevon@lemmy.kde.social 3 points 1 month ago

I tried to do this before, but it did not work out.

I couldn't make the meta key alone open overview. I also tried to add a dock there, but I can only have a panel when not in overview, which is the opposite of that I wanted. I also liked the notification menu and the quick toggles menu in top right corner.

I have been planning to get into plasma extension development to fix some of these issues.

10
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by sevon@lemmy.kde.social to c/apple_enthusiast@lemmy.world

Part 1: https://lemmy.kde.social/post/1763180

So I went and did it. Ordered an adapter and an intel ax200. It seems work just fine out of the box in linux. This cost me 25 to 30 euros total.

Pics

Antenna considerations

The laptop was only designed for up to ac. The new card can do ax, which uses a different band. My router doesn't support ax, so I have no clue if that will see significant signal drop with the old antennae. I actually haven't even bothered to look deep enough to know if this even would be an issue, maybe it's okay.

28
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by sevon@lemmy.kde.social to c/apple_enthusiast@lemmy.world

Edit: https://lemmy.kde.social/post/1921123

I have this old '13 air. It's outta support, so I run fedora instead of macos. It has BCM4630 for wireless (🖕 Broadcom), which had me manually install a rather unreliable driver to ever get it working. Yesterday I updated, and it can't find any networks anymore.

Instead of messing with broadcom drivers anymore, I'd rather replace the hardware with something better. Has anyone here tried this? Know what will work both in linux and macos, if I were to pass this thing to someone else later?

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sevon

joined 5 months ago