In what sense is DuckDNS unreliable?
In what sense is DuckDNS unreliable?
It’s about colors. I’m not an expert, but there is something about professional color stuff that is still in the works to migrate to Wayland.
And of course for Krita it’s quite crucial that colours are right.
Then there’s me who installs VLC and calls it a day. I mean… It does the job perfectly fine.
To be honest, I’m waiting until we finally get federated git hosting, specially if done with ActivityPub. I think it fits too well the use case.
I believe forgejo is getting there, but it’s still not possible.
I mean, being able to carry a little thing with multiple OSs AND STILL being able to use it as portable storage for other stuff is really useful.
Wasn’t matrix 2.0 a thing already?
Still no word suggestions?? Wow.
Anyway, Heliboard exists.
RCS is supposed to be a distributed protocol, just like SMS, but using data. It is not the same as Signal. Tho, currently, Google is the main provider for almost all phone companies.
RCS is not another chat app.
It’s the NEW SMS. That is why it is so important, and that is why it works ONLY IF YOU HAVE A PHONE. Because that’s literally the point.
Having your mom, grandpa, and everyone automatically use encrypted, modern comnunication just because they have a phone is extremely important.
Realise that in places where SMS has been historically free, SMS is the standard.
XMPP, Matrix or whatever will obviously still have its place for more “incognito” conversations. But having a phone number should also give you access to a better alternative than SMS.
Pedantic, but Google Messages’ RCS. And it’s all Google’s fault because they are holding the API hostage, probably because they want to create familiarity with the app so that people don’t switch once they finally open up.
They are remaking all apps as native apps so maybe this problem gets addressed too.
Where’s that tool then?
But an AI can “realise” the code might be downloading something it doesn’t need to. That’s the point.
AI is “smart” and understands that you told it that the library was supposed to do something specific, and it can understand that and look for things that seem not correlated to the purpose of the repo.
Yes, of course, the idea would be something like passing the AI a repo link and a prompt like “this repo is supposed to be used for X, tell me if you find anything weird that doesn’t fit that purpose”.
I understand, but I wouldn’t be surprised to see some solution out there that could maybe feed the AI chunks of code without context… It may still be able to detect “hey you told me this software is supposed to do X and here it seems to be doing Y”.
I guess we’ll have to wait a couple of years for these tools to be accessible and affordable.
Look… I certainly (particularly verbally) will probably use “he” a lot more than I should… And no one cares.
But if someone makes a PR changing these into “they”, I would reply with “shit, you’re right, this is objectively better, thanks for your work”.
Instead, these contributors get their PR shut down with the most terrible, supremacist excuse. That’s the problem. There’s the true idiot.
Not my experience so far with my single service I’ve been running for a year. It’s making me even think of opening up even more stuff.
It definitely is useful, I use it for train tickets, or user QR codes for things such as IKEA, supermarkets, gas stations… It’s quite literally a virtual wallet where you have all your “cards”, but they are QRs.
This way, for example, you don’t have to install every single app to get the QR code that identifies you in every market. You just paste them into this wallet and you are good to go!
NFC payments require a transaction platform and these things are only possible with banks or huge, “trusted” companies like Google/Apple.
Although things might start changing in Europe (for now) with GNU Taler.
I support this idea. Moving is the perfect opportunity to classify your stuff into useful and wasteful, specially clothes, shoes, and some older electronics. Recycle and donate.
Also, if you have a phone you can turn any document into a digital one, find manuals online and trash the paper ones, etc.
It’s amazing when you suddenly feel lighter, and you didn’t know you had all that psychological weight on you.