[-] [email protected] 7 points 9 months ago

Russia banned Telegram, everyone (incl. the government) continued to use it, Russia unbanned Telegram - that's how it looks from here. A government official told me Telegram being unbanned was just a matter of time when it was still banned.

[-] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

While I agree that LLMs can achieve human-tier efficiency at most tasks eventually (some architectural changes will be necessary, but the core approach seems sound), it's wrong to say it's modeled after the human brain. We have no idea how brains work as they're super complex, we're building artificial neural networks from the ground up. AI uses centuries' worth of math, but with our current maths knowledge the code isn't too complicated. Human brains aren't like that, they can't be summed up in a few lines of code because DNA is a huge mess that contains so much more than just "learning", so many inactive or redundant bits and pieces. We're building LLMs with knowledge of how languages work, not how brains work.

[-] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago

No, migration is caused by economics, so it only makes sense to use economics to talk about it. In capitalism, migration follows the market laws, i.e. people migrating to where they expect to be paid more.

[-] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

There's no agency in the market. That's the entire point of markets - being independent of a single human's whims and being an equalizing force, the "invisible hand".

And the entire point of communism is getting that agency, having production for the sake of humans rather than humans for the sake of production.

[-] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

ah yes, gay = bad, how progressive of you

edit: would you call Putin Ukrainian as means of insulting him?

[-] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

You are claiming that I said VP can magically override the US policy, while I said the exact opposite - VP can't and won't do shit unless the entire government undergoes a broad ideological shift.

Before that, you talked about responsibility, which I didn't talk about at all. I simply said that Israel exists in its current form thanks to the US, which is objectively true. There's no "responsibility" or "morals" in saying that much, and people all across the political spectrum can agree with this.

And no, I didn't call what you said a logical fallacy, because fallacy and logical fallacy are two different terms (leaving aside whether what you are saying is indeed a logical fallacy).

[-] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

Your comments are a prime example of the fallacies of analytical (as opposed to dialectical) thinking. I'm talking about the broader interconnections, relations, tendencies, and you're trying to shift the focus from the system into its constituent parts. Of course, if you do that, you can get any conclusion you want. The fact of the matter is you can't look at Israel without looking at the US, you can't look at Kamala without looking at the American government.

You're asking - "what would Kamala asking for ceasefire change". I say - Kamala is part of the American government, which is dead set on supporting Israel, and she wouldn't magically change her mind, because her consciousness, like anyone else's, is shaped by her social being. That said, that doesn't mean she won't ever change her mind - if she does, it would be indicative of broader shifts and contradictions among American elites. Her asking for ceasefire wouldn't be a cause - it would be a symptom. As for what American support for a ceasefire change, I wrote about that in my comment above.

[-] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

it's the way Nix works too

[-] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)
  • full disk encryption on everything except the router (no point in encrypting the router)
    • the server doesn't have a display connected for obvious reasons, so I'm manually unlocking it via ssh on each boot
      • obviously, the SSH keys are different, so the server has a different IP in initrd. That said, I still don't have any protection against malicious modification of initrd or UEFI
  • the server scans all new SSL certificates in realtime using certspotter and notifies me of any new certificates issued for my domains that it doesn't know about (I use Cloudflare so it triggers relatively often, but I still do checks on who the issuer is)
  • firewall blocks outgoing 25 so nobody can impersonate my mailserver
[-] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

Rust can be bootstrapped with mrustc to my knowledge

[-] [email protected] 8 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Most phones have no mainline Linux support, and require something like ubports, which can use an unholy hack to run Linux userspace based on Android drivers and kernel. I think this one can be installed to just about any Android phone (worst case you can use the generic GSI image, which should work but be slow). Personally, I've never once bricked a phone by flashing it, and I've been doing it since ~2015 (don't remember the year, but it was a Lenovo S660).

OnePlus 6 is a 5 year old phone with a SoC that has comparatively high development velocity (SDM845), which is why it's finally getting close to full mainline support for basic features like calls/SMS/camera/sensors (still not fully there, and yes sensors are needed, they make stuff like autorotate and turning touchscreen off when you put your phone to your ear during a call work). If you want to tinker with Linux, I recommend a Pinephone; though Mobian did mention how frustrating its ecosystem is in their blog. Maybe Pinephone Pro or Librem are better, but they're way way way more expensive. If you want a daily driver, I recommend a OnePlus 6/6T as explained in the article, or some other SDM845 phone, and maybe don't DIY if you don't have the basic experience in working with ARM SBCs and Android ROMs like me lol.

postmarketOS is probably the smoothest experience you'll get on a wide range of devices, and I highly recommend it. Most other mobile Linux distros are often more or less piggy backing off their work (though of course other distros create cool stuff too).

[-] [email protected] 7 points 2 years ago

what do you even mean "don't support encryption"? Do you mean FDE? In that case PostmarketOS supports it, and you can get any other distro to use FDE if you tinker hard enough

view more: ‹ prev next ›

chayleaf

0 post score
0 comment score
joined 3 years ago