7
submitted 23 hours ago* (last edited 23 hours ago) by CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world to c/linux@lemmy.ml

It's a spinner that shows up when something is loading, like pulling a docker container or something like that.

These are the relevant context:

  • Arch
  • GNOME 49
  • Hack Nerd Font
  • Font scaling 1.30
  • Zsh + Spaceship Prompt
  • Ptyxis

Please I'm begging you I'd pay for a fix at this point. It needs to fill all the dots.

[-] CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world 6 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

It's like that, including the comments, they all look like bots. A few people just mentioned it's AI (1 of 13 comments at the time of writing this).

It feels a lot like "dead internet theory" to me:

https://www.linkedin.com/posts/guilherme-dambros_cleancode-softwareengineering-programmingtips-activity-7420418699028905984-r0Gj

[-] CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world 32 points 1 week ago

I think it's partially partially correct, it's questionable if this is actual CODE. But for sure it's BAD.

[-] CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world 27 points 1 week ago

For what I've seen so far, LLMs struggle to generate uniform text and letters, even high end models.

282
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world to c/fuck_ai@lemmy.world
[-] CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world 79 points 1 week ago

The sad truth is: you can't talk about online privacy with normal people, they just won't understand, if you try to explain it, they don't care, simple as that! They'll ignore anything you say and probably call you paranoid.

53
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world to c/privacy@lemmy.ml

Do you think it really doesn't train on your data?

I've been using it and it looks good so far, I just ask simple questions and never let the context get too big.

It's good that it doesn't require login, just open and ask something.

[-] CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world 41 points 1 week ago

That's a very unfortunate name for the project, given Google's AI Gemini.

23
[-] CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world 35 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

That's exactly why I migrated from Fedora to Arch, I want a distro with little to none corporation influence.

To me, the real Linux experience is Arch.

I didn't want to wait for some bad decision to be made. Time is showing I took the right decision.

19

Did anyone else here noticed?

No matter the subject or your opinion, there's always people down voting you.

I don't care about up/down votes but we can't deny that's a way to know the acceptance of your thoughts by the community.

I tried to make some posts absolute neutral, just asking simple things to see if people discuss and interact which each other and me, I just got down voted out of nowhere.

Right now I'm seeing the karma count fighting going up and down, some people just down vote out of nowhere without any possible logic explanation.

Did anyone figure out what's up with those people?

Discussing on Reddit feels like a fight to know who has the best opinion of all, you just aren't allowed to think different or they'll down vote you to hell.

[-] CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world 36 points 3 months ago

Thinking about pirating it, but I have other games in my pirate list

-54
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world to c/programming@programming.dev

Obs.: I'm using "[REDACTED]" to not look like I'm doing some advertising.

Sorry to bring AI subject here, but I'm terrified by how efficient AI generation code became in the past few years.

Last year I was seeing a designer community with desperate people because of AI generative images, many people hopeless because how more convenient it is, way more than paying for a freelance to do something reasonable.

Now I'm with the same feeling as a programmer. I just decided to take a look into AI a little deeper, as I don't use it very often. So I tried the recent [REDACTED] editor, which is just [REDACTED] with AI agent features (an AI that does more than just generate text, it create files, make decisions etc...). And I must say, programming jobs will be reduced a lot.

The app was able to do a entire module of a side project, integrating with another API and following the same conventions I did. It worked in the first try. It created all the files and everything.

Many people bring this argument: AI won't replace devs, we'll always need devs to check code etc. Ok, I agree with that, but if before we needed 5 devs to do a job, now we just need 1 to revise all the job an AI did alone equivalent to 5 devs programming.

So, there's no way it won't impact the devs market. I'm being optimistic here, because the future is still unclear, but if it keeps the same rate we can reduce the dev jobs to near zero.

This is what every executive always wanted, get rid of devs, and now they can. Devs were always an inconvenience to executives, but they couldn't get the job done without devs.

Now they can focus all money on AI research until it gets nearly perfect, reduce the skill needed to deal with code and build projects without too much knowledge, and get rid of many devs too.

It's undeniable that AI jobs WILL be affected in a negative way. I'm seriously considering leaving this area and use programming just as a hobby, nothing more.

66

If so, I'd like to know about that questions:

  • Do you use an code autocomplete AI or type in a chat?
  • Do you consider environment damage that use of AIs can cause?
  • What type of AI do you use?
  • Usually, what do you ask AIs to do?
185
313
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world to c/privacy@lemmy.ml

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/37402366

This is the main reason I completely ditched Reddit, if you use the new Reddit interface instead of the old one (old.reddit.com), you'll see a constant request being made to "https://www.reddit.com/svc/shreddit/events" (open your DevTools > Network tab, can't see on Firefox idk why).

The problem is, if you add this to your Ublock Origin filters the website won't load properly, that's why uBO team didn't block it already.

You'll notice this request isn't only being made from a interval but also when you do basically any action in the site, like pausing or resuming a video (send timestamps of when did you pause or resumed).

It sends other kind of data like what subjects you're seeing when closed a tab or the related subjects of a post you click, this all can be used to trace a perfect profile of you and things you like.

You can avoid that using the old.reddit but it still has the same kind of tracker, even tho you can block it here without major issues.

By my analysis, old Reddit interface does the same but to a random URL path that always starts with "reddit.com/api/something". Ex.: reddit.com/api/friends So you can block anything that starts with "www.reddit.com/api" in your custom filters (after all you're using old.reddit.com), then you're mostly free from Reddit trackers (more or less). Side effect is, you won't be able to use the chat in the old interface.

217
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world to c/reddit@lemmy.world

This is the main reason I completely ditched Reddit, if you use the new Reddit interface instead of the old one (old.reddit.com), you'll see a constant request being made to "https://www.reddit.com/svc/shreddit/events" (open your DevTools > Network tab, can't see on Firefox idk why).

The problem is, if you add this to your Ublock Origin filters the website won't load properly, that's why uBO team didn't block it already.

You'll notice this request isn't only being made from a interval but also when you do basically any action in the site, like pausing or resuming a video (send timestamps of when did you pause or resumed).

It sends other kind of data like what subjects you're seeing when closed a tab or the related subjects of a post you click, this all can be used to trace a perfect profile of you and things you like.

You can avoid that by using the old.reddit but it still has the same kind of tracker, even tho you can block it here without major issues.

By my analysis, old Reddit interface does the same but to a random URL path that always starts with "reddit.com/api/something". Ex.: reddit.com/api/friends So you can block anything that starts with "www.reddit.com/api" in your custom filters (after all you're using old.reddit.com), then you're mostly free from Reddit trackers (more or less). Side effect is, you won't be able to use the chat in the old interface.

[-] CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world 54 points 3 months ago

Reddit is a living-dead platform, I always have the feeling that most posts there are made by bots.

[-] CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world 36 points 3 months ago

I'd say given the AMD contributions to Linux better to support them with your money instead of NVIDIA.

[-] CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world 47 points 4 months ago

I dislike master because main is shorter and faster to type

331

Tired of this abusive business model that big companies use on games.

  • I see a game on Steam with some decent price
  • I click on it
  • Dozens of DLCs, "Gold", "Deluxe" "Enhanced" version to enjoy the full game
  • Then you decide to pay for this shit anyway
  • But then the game is behind a launcher, that needs online connection and account even if it's full single-player
  • The game sometimes are just a port from an old console with almost full price, a game that you've paid for before
  • The game needs a hell amount of updates do become playable
  • And so much more...

Steam did an excellent job keeping me away from piracy, they provide too much good feature, discounts and etc... But not even Steam can make miracles against those abusive practices.

I must say RDR1 port was the last drop to me, It's game I played back on PS3 on my teenager time, I wanted to have some good memories and play it again, guess what, a full AAA price on a port, it's not even a remaster.

I've been avoiding EA and Ubisoft games for years, but still buying from big companies on Steam. Now I just give up, there's no more hope for AAA games, only mercenary companies are left: EA, Ubisoft, Rockstar, Activision, 2K, Bungie etc...

  • EA: Games with a hell amount of DLCs, the same FIFA every single year at full price, launcher required, they don't even try to hide anymore
  • Ubisoft: Same thing as EA, lots of DLCs, missed some game content from an old Prince of Persia because they shut an old launcher integrated to the game.
  • Rockstar: Launchers everywhere, charging a full price for the same game multiple times (GTA V).
  • Activision: You pay a full price and it still comes with a hell amount of micro-transactions, killed COD.
  • 2K: Out of nowhere decided to add a launcher to every old game they had (Bioshock and others I think) saying it was "QoL" update, now they decided to remove it, too late. The new Borderlands 4 terribly optimized, here we go with some dozens of updates again.
  • Bungie: The live service model, removed a lot of old paid contents from Destiny, the game will eventually die.

I'll still pay for small companies games, because I can, but those big ones, honestly, I don't give a shit anymore, they could be erased from existence together with all their games, I really don't care. Some smaller companies I've had a good experience and I think it's worth paying for: Ghost Ship Games, No More Robots, Hello Games, Techland, Frictional Games, Annapurna Interactive.

Some companies are in a limbo to me, I'm not entirely sure about it: Capcom, Bethesda, Warner, Square Enix.

So, that's it, I just downloaded Spider Man Remastered and RDR from FitGirl, it worked seamless, I didn't have a single issue. I could even add as non-Steam game and use Steam input (thanks Steam), I'll probably use some script to move to savegames data to the cloud, and let the packed games on an external HDD (finally, I'll own my games).

Another thing that's hard to ditch to me is achievement tracker, I know we have AchievementWatcher but it doesn't work too well on pirated games. It's something I'll need to get used, not a big deal tbh.

I'll probably use the money I'd spend on AAA games to explore some indie games. And AAA games are now always pirate.

Obs.: The companies I've mentioned here are from my own experience, this isn't meant to be an Wikipedia of good/bad companies, I know there are more decent and bad companies out there.

132
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world to c/privacy@lemmy.ml

I'm thinking about paying for a VPN, I currently don't use one.

I'd like to use Mullvad but they don't seem to have regional prices, while Proton does.

I wonder if Proton is still a reliable option, Proton is 60% cheaper in my country, probably because regional pricing (but I didn't check if it's really the case).

If anyone has any other suggestion I'd like to hear it.

view more: next ›

CodenameDarlen

0 post score
0 comment score
joined 5 months ago