halo5

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 3 points 8 months ago

Worst of all, radio edits of "Sultans of Swing" that cut the guitar solo...

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

We joke, but I actually have an 8-core Orange Pi with 16GB RAM and a 512GB NVMe SSD that performs really well running Debian/Gnome!

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

the 7950X3D was supported on Windows from day 1, while on Linux the scheduler is still unaware of the different perf characteristics to this day.

That may be true, but with the ridiculous increase in performance for this CPU due to the massive amount of L3 cache (X3D), I don't care. I just replaced a Linux compute node with an Intel Xeon Silver compute node with a custom built Linux node that features the 7950X3D, and I'm benchmarking now at over twice the speed (CFD-type work)! Not bad for a $650 consumer CPU. The difference between 128MB and 12MB of L3 cache is apparently pretty huge, from what I'm seeing. I think it's important to note that L3 cache can be shared across CPU cores.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago

Honestly, I just can't get past the absolutely horrible logo. Right up there with TempleOS IMO...

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

Modified Ubuntu, Snap-less...

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago (2 children)

And this is why I choose Debian...

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Like non-profit American Red Cross, who laundered half a billion and did fuck all to help Haiti https://www.propublica.org/article/how-the-red-cross-raised-half-a-billion-dollars-for-haiti-and-built-6-homes

Yea, the Red Cross is fucked up, and I learned that from my dad in 1996 when he died. All about the money. I'll send my money to St. Jude, thank you very much...

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

IMO all three of these statements are true.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Much better OS updates, Updating the OS doesn’t all the time require restart (you should do that anyway), but OS updates don’t happen suddenly forcing themselves, when you maybe doing something important.

Typical updates on Linux take MINUTES, and (sometimes) a single reboot.

And for the record, with regards to @oats point #1 for the negative, I have a school machine (university level, research-related work). Matlab, Mathematica, R, Rust, Intel and Nvidia (CUDA) Fortran are all available for Linux. And, in many instances, many CPU-intensive applications may only be available on Linux (and Linux clusters).

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

I think that, IMO, you have to have a reason to move AWAY from Windows. The fact that you're asking the question tells me that you may have problems with Windows (and maybe Windows 11 in particular?). TPM and an initial user creation process that requires a Microsoft account come to mind.

I still recommend Ubuntu or Mint Linux for new users, although I dislike Snap packages (in the case of Ubuntu) and I recommend getting away from Snaps as soon as possible. These distros pretty much just work. I'm more fond of the MacOS look and feel, so this is what my desktop looks like currently .

EDIT: I should point out that this is actually STOCK Ubuntu 23.04...

As you can see, my setup is very similar to MacOS (but not EXACTLY the same, which I prefer). Mint Linux is basically like Windows 10, only much better IMO. You pretty much can't go wrong with these two...

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

I’ve yet to see a single Linux kernel that is aesthetically pleasing on anywhere near the level of OSX or Windows 11… Or Windows 10… Or hell, 7, 8, and Vista lmao.

The fact that you're using the terms "kernel" and "aesthetically pleasing" in the same sentence (and equating that to GNU/Linux "Proper") leads me to believe that you don't understand what a kernel is. Or really know what you're talking about, for that matter...

 

I'm seeing some pretty serious posting issues. If a user can't post, I don't see Lemmy being able to move forward. This "spinning wheel" will be the death of Lemmy IMO if it doesn't get fixed. I mean damn, I'm trying to create NEW content! I have a Lemmy tab in my browser that's been spinning for the last 30 minutes, at least. On a POST. Which means that people lose EVERYTHING if it fails. OR, it's working and they don't know it, which is equally bad. This is an untenable situation IMO. If this doesn't get fixed, kbin or something else takes over. I HATE this because, at this point, I've invested time and energy into Lemmy! I want Lemmy to succeed, but damn!

I'm not even sure that THIS will post, but I'm gonna try...

 

So, I know that everyone has been posting reports of the bug where one can be in edit mode for a reply when the screen refreshes and the content (and the edit) vanishes, which is a MAJOR bug IMO. I don't think that people will continue to use a site where their edits/posts just disappear at random. This hasn't happened to me yet, but I could understand the frustration that's associated with this type of bug.

Another bug that I've noticed is that, when submit a new post or, less often, when I post a reply, I get a spinning wheel. This wheel keeps spinning for minutes sometimes and, because I actually get REPLIES to the post, I can see that the post has gone through. However, I'm still seeing the spinning wheel on the browser tab where I'm making the post. From what I'm seeing, that post has gone through, even though I still have the spinning wheel during submission. This, is also a MAJOR bug and should be fixed as soon as possible, IMO.

So, the question is, what's the best method/route to report such a thing? I think that one really big advantage of using Lemmy (as opposed to Reddit) is probably the extent to which the developers work with end users in order to fix such bugs. However, we definitely need to be aware of the proper method for submitting these bugs. TIA!

 

Wow. Front page of huffpost.com right now. Interesting...

 

Here's an interesting ARS article regarding the Reddit fiasco, but from the moderators' perspective.

 

May be a repost, but I'm just trying out posting to the Linux group...

 

So, as a new Rexxitor (love the new term, BTW), I'm thinking that we need to give back a little bit, considering the additional server costs (which are substantial; I'm an IT admin so trust me the costs are a bit ridiculous!). This is a link to the Patreon account for Lemmy.world. Let's give back if we can and, hopefully, we can improve performance when posting, reading, etc. It may also help if Lemmy.world could provide a payment alternative where our credit cards don't get flagged when we try to set up payment via Opencollective or Patreon in the U.S.

Let's get rid of that little circle when posting...

Thanks for considering!

 

I wonder how many moderators may adjust their protest time frame as a result of this comment...

view more: next ›