[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

The top photo's wasp comes off as a yellow jacket to me. They are notoriously aggressive compared to milder species like mud daubers and paper wasps. So if that's the look of the waso that stung ya, I'm completely unsurprised.

For reference we tend to get quite a few paper wasps in our garden, and they are so mild that they will fly right by us without giving a damn.

Though, to be clear, a lot of wasp aggresssion is dependent on the temperment of their queen. You might need to remove the nest.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago

There is no such thing. Every "generic, terminal-based installer" is in reaity a script that was intentionally made to target many multiple distributions.

And do you know what most of them do...? Use the inbuilt package manager of your distro.

That and set up some systemd services and PATHs, sometimes.

You're such a fucking goober.

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

I dont think this is a reasomable counterpoint because the target audience in question would also vastly prefer shit as simple as an mspaint illustration or a dithered irl image.

Also, it is quite feasible to find royalty free images, and I have no idea where you're getting the impression it is not. There are a host of images that provide licensing metadata. Google image search and co. can find these. It's simply a matter of verifying the license authenticity.

It's just fundementally stupid.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago

It is self-evident that free software with open licensing and no strings attached is a superior and more beneficial ownership model than closed source paid licensing. That part I don't think anyone needs to be convinced of.

As someone who has both technical and nontechnical people in their family, I call bs. Even if it is partially self-evident (in the fact that you dont need to sign into an account or pay for it), the details, and more importantly the weight, of FOSS is often lost on people.

I've had to watch some of them walk into a rake and bruise their foreheads several times over before really absorbing it.

It's something people need to really read up on before true comprehension. That, or get burnt really really badly.

Ideology? Politics? Tomato tomatoh in my eyes. At the very least, they're nearly inseperable (think: DMCA, copyright law, etc.)

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

Go is a simpler-to-read language that does not involve lifetimes (as you know, it is GC'd). For a lot of smaller projects like this, the boringness of Go is preferred. Less mental bandwidth required.

I'll admit my definition of "industrial" here was vague, but I think you can get my point. I'm not trying to say that Rust isn't good in a business setting - my job also has Rust in the code!

However, for these purposes, most of the benefits of Rust in this situation are already provided by Go.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I really have no idea why everyone is bashing Signal so much here. None of the concerns listed seem even slightly technical.

The only problem I have with signal is that it is:

A. Centralized (which isn't explicitly a privacy concern, but a control concern in-line with linux and foss)

B. Requires a phone number to register.

It is quite private in spite of that, and goes to great lengths to achieve that privacy. It is what I see people in the security community consistently suggest.

However, if this is a public group, are we to really be that concerned about many of the considerations Signal tries to tackle? Worst case scenario a bad actor simply enters the chat and backs everything up.

It seems like our threat model is moreso in the way of general surveillance economy concerns (and perhaps to have a slightly less public entry).

In this case, point A and B become even more glaring! Why not something like an E2E encrypted Matrix chat?

[-] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago

At this point we all need fake social media accounts

[-] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago

On the one hand, Toybox exists. So, the non-copyleft license bs isn't new. On the other hand, toybox afaik isnt aiming to treat "deviations with GNu as bugs". Almost feels hostile-takeover-ish though I know that almost certinly isn't the idea behindbit.

If this ends in proprietization bs I'm going to throw hands.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

That's a lot better than it could be. But I'm also talking about training costs. Models have to be updated to work swimmingly with new languages, conventions, libraries, etc. Models are not future-proof.

There are more efficient training methods being employed. See: the stuff R1 used. And existing models cam be retooled. But it's still an intrinsic problem.

Perhaps most importantly it's out of the reach of common consumer grade hardware to train a half decent LLM from scratch. It's a tech that exists mostly in the scope of concentrated power among peoole who care little for their enviromental ramifications. Relying on this in the short term puts influence and power in the hands of people willing to burn our planet. Quite the hard sell, as you might imagine.

Also see: the other points I made

[-] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

I aint just talking about inference. Training costs are insane and models have to be updated to be used well with new languages, libraries, etc.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

Eh. Fediverse is a portmanteau of federation and universe. It's perfectly fine and not misleading imho to suggest other federation-capable services in this context. Especially considering Matrix is definitely part of the wider cultural context underpinning the transition of some groups to using these counterculture services (it's often frequently recommended in these contects, often used by people on mastoson etc anyways),

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