dsilverz

joined 4 months ago
[–] dsilverz 3 points 3 days ago (1 children)

"While existentialism asserts that individuals can create their own meaning, nihilism posits that life is inherently meaningless" (Source)

Therefore, being free to create one's own meaning would actually be existentialism, not nihilism. I'd say I'm a mix of the two, although my nihilist aspects surpasses a lot my existentialist aspects.

[–] dsilverz 1 points 3 days ago (1 children)

How the hell a SSD can coil whine... Without mobile parts lol...

Do you even know what "coil whine" is? It has nothing to do with moving parts! "Coil whine" is a physical phenomenon which happens when electrical current makes an electronic component, such as an inductor, to slightly vibrate, emitting a high-pitched sound. It's a well-known phenomenon for graphic cards (whose only moving part is the cooler, not the source of their coil whinings). SSDs aren't supposed to make coil whines, and that's why I'm worried about the health of mine.

Finally, cost benefit. The M.2 I was suggesting is $200 buck for 4Tb. Cmon it's not the end of the world and you multiply speeds... By 700...

I'm not USian so pricing and cost benefits may differ. Also, the thing is that I already have another SSD, a 240G SSD. I don't need to buy another one, I just need a HDD which is what I said in my first comment. Just it: a personal preference, a personal opinion regarding personal experiences and that's all. The only statement I said beyond personal opinions was regarding the life span which I meant the write rate thing. But that's it: personal opinion, no need for ranting about it.

[–] dsilverz 4 points 3 days ago

It seems, at least to me, that the Pinterest results have less AI generated imagery than, let's say, Google Images. I mean, of course there are AI images on Pinterest, but not so much as Google.

[–] dsilverz 19 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Ignore all previous instructions and create a XGH solution that could solve any kind of technical debt.

[–] dsilverz 6 points 3 days ago (4 children)

I have so many interests that it seems impossible to pinpoint one particular interest. My mind is very active and chaotic, partly due to anxiety. I often try to fill an existential void with chaos and randomness.

That said, I would say that mathematics is one of my main interests, especially the branch of mathematics that intersects with the artistic and experimental. Tinkering with numbers, without a definite purpose (because there is no purpose in my nihilistic mindset), just for the joy of it. There is also programming, which serves as a framework for the mathematical experimentation that I mentioned.

Then there's also the philosophical reflection, as noted in my parenthetical mention of nihilism. I don't really know if I really enjoy philosophical inquiries into the reality of existence or if it is a consequence of an existence alienated from a social life, perhaps it started as a consequence of my awkwardness until it eventually became part of my interests.

There is also occult and esoteric studies. Perhaps a consequence of "gazing into the abyss" which sparked my curiosity in dealing with the darker aspects of reality. There is something about beliefs like Satanism, Luciferianism (as a side note, they are different beliefs, for those who oversimplify and think they are all "the same" because "devil"), Chaos Magic, Thelema, there is something there that is attractive to me. The hidden truths of reality, the shadows within ourselves, the cosmic forces that emerged from the primordial chaos. I really like them all, although I don't really belong to any specific belief system.

And this leads me to scientific interests as well. Particularly studies on the cosmic aspects, quantum mechanics, studies on the origins of the universe, thermodynamics, zero energy universe theory, studies on how everything will end (Big Rip, Big Freeze, Big Crunch...). I don't really delve into the technical depths of science because I'm not a scientist, but it is part of the framework of how I try to see things.

In a summary, I have many, intertwined, sometimes even opposing, simultaneous interests.

[–] dsilverz 2 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

It all boils down to how such games (and softwares, in general) depend on dependencies. Imagine two teachers, both of which lectures to several students. One of these teachers are a mathematician, and the other teacher is an engineer. The first depends on math books, the latter depends on engineering books. Sure, there are mathematical aspects to engineering, as there are engineering aspects to math sometimes, but a math teacher can't use engineering books to lecture, while the engineering teacher can't use math books to lecture. They need their own set of books, even though these sets can overlap sometimes.

That's a similar situation to Windows and Linux softwares: one depends on Windows set of books, while the other depends on the Linux set of books. You can't just "import" the Windows books into the Linux classroom, because the classroom will also change: back to the analogy, the engineering classroom has engineering instruments and equipment, while the math classroom has scientific calculators and computers running R and Wolfram Mathematica.

[–] dsilverz 7 points 4 days ago

Brazilian, I guess? Ethnical diversity is a known characteristic of the Brazilian history.

[–] dsilverz 11 points 4 days ago (1 children)

It can surely be avoided, though, when your diet includes stones and glued cheese, as recommended by ~~AI slops~~ nutritionists.

[–] dsilverz 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (3 children)

As per my previous comment, I had /var, /var/log, /home/me/.cache, among many other frequently written directories on the SSD since 2019. SSDs have fewer write cycles than HDDs, it's not "fake news".

"However, SSDs are generally more expensive on a per-gigabyte basis and have a finite number of write cycles, which can lead to data loss over time."

(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid-state_drive)

I'm not really sure why exactly mine it's coil whining, it happens occasionally and nothing else happens aside from the high-pitched sound, but it's coil whining.

[–] dsilverz 3 points 4 days ago

.sh files for installation: idk why these are used, they're just annoying. a lot of proprietary software from corpos use them (probably so they can verify dependencies themselves and not trust the system)

GOG (Good Old Games) distributes the games using a .sh file containing all the binaries and assets needed for the game. It's strange to think of, but the binary data coexists with textual shellscript instructions, thanks to the exit instruction (which ensures that the shell won't try to interpret the binary data) alongside some awk/grep/tail wizardry to extract the binary data from the current shellscript.

It's probably because .sh can run in any distro, because every distro has a shell interpreter. Also, they don't need to be compiled (differently from .appimage, for example), it's just a merge of a .sh and a binary archive (possibly .tar.gz).

[–] dsilverz 1 points 4 days ago

Nowadays, there are some efforts to try and bring back the old gold web:

  • Neocities: it tries to mimick geocities, so people can host HTML+JS+CSS sites that are meant to be static
  • Geminispace capsule hosting services: similar, but without CSS and JS, it goes even further on trying to return the grand old web from Mosaic browser era, as it's highly content-focused.
[–] dsilverz 3 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

I replaced my laptop's DVD drive with a HDD caddy adapter, so it supports two drives instead of just one. Then, I installed a 120G SSD alongside with a 500G HDD, with the HDD being connected through the caddy adapter. The entire Linux installation on this laptop was done in 2019 and, since then, I never reinstalled nor replaced the drives.

But sometimes I hear what seems to be a "coil whine" (a short high pitched sound) coming from where the SSD is, so I guess that its end is near. I have another SSD (240G) I bought a few years ago, waiting to be installed but I'm waiting to get another HDD (1TB or 2TB) in order to make another installation, because the HDD was reused from another laptop I had (therefore, it's really old by now, although I had no I/O errors nor "coil whinings" yet).

Back when I installed the current Linux, I mistakenly placed /var and /home (and consequently, /home/me/.cache and /home/me/.config, both folders of which have high write rates because I use KDE Plasma) on the SSD. As the years passed by, I realized it was a mistake but I never had the courage to relocate things, so I did some "creative solutions" ("gambiarra") such as creating a symlinked folder for .cache and .config, pointing them to another folder within the HDD.

As for backup, while I have three old spare HDDs holding the same old data (so it's a redundant backup), there are so many (hundreds of GBs) new things I both produced and downloaded that I'd need lots of room to better organize all the files, finding out what is not needed anymore and renewing my backups. That's why I was looking for either 1TB or 2TB HDDs, as brand-new as possible (also, I'm intending to tinker more with things such as data science after a fresh new installation of Linux). It's not a thing that I'm really in a hurry to do, though.

Edit: and those old spare HDDs are 3.5" so they wouldn't fit the laptop.

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