CreativeTensors

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Ah yes those powerless companies that have simply no choice but to destroy our biosphere.

It's not like they can use the money that they're currently using to lobby against environmental regulation and oversight for heavier oversight, regulations and *gasp* penalties instead... Yes it's literally impossible to take a principled stance at the expense of literally any amount of profit. Besides, who needs clean air and livable temperatures anyway?

No it must be the consumer who must wade through the sea of greenwashing and propaganda spread by companies who have no problem outright lying about their carbon emissions to everyone's faces. Because it's just so easy for everyone to know the complete supply chain of every product they buy. Simple really.

Edit: After looking through your comment history I can't help but think what you said was meant as more of a call to action for people rather than stepping to bat for multinationals as if they are helpless victims with no agency. Apologies if my comment came across as mean spirited I've just been on edge recently due to certain undisclosed life events. I'll keep my base comment as is for archival though.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 year ago (10 children)

Compatibility with literally anything under the sun that can decompress a compressed file.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This is a list of all the open source software I have come across and use frequently to semi frequently. There will likely be some overlap with stuff everyone has already posted.

Photography and Image manipulation

  • Darktable → RAW photo processing
  • GIMP→ Photoshop alternative
  • Krita → Digital painting (have only used it a bit, but I hear it's good)
  • Inkscape → Vector Graphics
  • Automatic1111 → Diffusion model AI toolkit (mostly Stable Diffusion but also has extensions for other diffusion based models like OpenAI's Shap-E)

3D modeling and Printing

  • Blender → 3D Modeling, sculpting, 2D animation, compositing all rolled together (simply one of the best examples of FOSS)
  • Meshroom → Photogrammetry
  • PrusaSlicer → 3D printing slicer based on Slic3r

Video editing and Processing

  • Kdenlive → Genuinely good video editor
  • FFMPEG → Command line media toolkit (very complex but also works on android through Termux)
  • Instant NeRF → Neural Radiance Fields, think photoscan to a 3D representation (not meant to make 3D meshes unfortunately)

Misc

  • Calibre → E-book management
  • Serge → Self hosted Local LLM's made a bit easier to deal with
  • Firefox → Web browser

FOSS I'm excited for

  • DragGAN → Manipulate images by intuitively dragging, more on this here and here (official code being released this month but there are already projects based on the paper with working examples)
  • CoDi → "Composable Diffusion" Any2Any conversion Txt2Vid, Vid2Audio, Audio+Txt2Img, whatever
  • Neuralangelo → Promises to be NeRF's for 3D models (don't know if it will be FOSS but I'm hopeful)
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

IMO It's relative

My current laptop (edit: used for for studio apps, 3D modeling and rendering, and AI stuff) draws 240W but I'd say it's an improvement over the 500W+ I would be drawing from a desktop that would have been in it's place. The performance isn't that competitive with desktop parts but the Perf/Watt definitely better.

Most people are just going to be using their phones and tablets to browse the web and watch videos anyway, with the odd Ultrabook here and there which are still pretty good in a Perf/Watt sense.

Jevons paradox does come to mind though.