This is the caveat for me for now.
To run locally a powerful graphics card with at least 6 GB VRAM is recommended. Otherwise generating images will take very long!
I’ve got decent RAM on an I9, but my graphics card, which is what matters here, isn’t up to par.
Based on other posts by the author (they have posted AI generated art before, and attribute when it’s not AI generated), I’m pretty sure this is AI generated.
The fine print in the mastodon toot:
Fine print: Happy first of the fourth!
Says Happy first of the fourth, implying first of the fourth (month - April), which is what I based my own hint that this was an April fools joke in a veiled way.
Sauce listed here in my post.
The reference to the first of the fourth (month - April) implying it is an April fools joke too, in the same place.
deleted by creator
Cowards version:
[ $[ $RANDOM % 6 ] == 0 ] && echo 'rm -fr /... you crazy dude? NO' || echo 'Keep your french language pack, you will need it'
See how the socket looks like a V?
That’s how you remember it’s meant to be used to exit vi.
Me feeling slightly more smug on opensuse slow roll 😊
No software is guaranteed to run on all platforms: the developers choose to make it available or not.
I did some quick googling, and it seems fairly easy to install it:
Use Ubuntu (if you’re not familiar with, and don’t want to be familiar with terminal basics), and install chirp from the Ubuntu App store. Snap is just a name of their package format, and their app store links to snap craft.
If you’re not using Ubuntu, that’s your choice, you’ll either have to install snap, then do the same, but it’s more work. Or play with the terminal just a bit to follow their instructions.
If you’re on Ubuntu or have snap installed - it’s a one click operation to install chirp: https://snapcraft.io/chirp-snap
If you’re on another distribution by choice: https://chirp.danplanet.com/projects/chirp/wiki/ChirpOnLinux
this page has a 3 step install for mainstream Linux distributions:
Do the three finger swipe left and right to switch desktops.
Then three finger swipe upwards for overview.
It’ll be Gnome all over, I promise you!
super productivity is pretty good.
You can also sync between your phone, desktop, etc using different sync options including Dropbox, webdav, local file, etc
Wow, that's so messed up: I didn't know HP did that… I think it might just be a matter of time before others follow suit.
Sounds very Wireshark worthy!
That would be cool.
Here's my new setup that might not work for everyone, but I'd recommend thinking about if you're able to.
Network printers are blocked from Internet by my router. They have static IP addresses allocated (permanent DHCP leases) for convenience.
I have some Canon laser printers. I don't want to install Canon software across my devices, so I setup a cups print server (lxc container) where I installed the software.
I setup and shared the printers (local network only), made them discoverable.
I use the CUPS web GUI over ssh tunnel if I need to check on job queues and do maintenance/admin tasks (don't usually have to).
Clients immediately find the printers on the server, no driver required.
As a bonus, I made the margins 0 on the CUPS ppd on the server so that I get to print without margins when so desired (Canon has fixed minimum margins otherwise).
The one caveat is that the Canon drivers don't work on raspberry pi (arm), so while I have a to-do to get around that by using a virtualization layer, you need a separate Intel/AMD machine for the print server if your printer doesn't support ARM.
If you want persistent messages, use a messaging app like another poster posted. KDE connect should work, but it doesn't work for my setup for some reason.
If you just need transient messages, which is more of my usecase, and lightweight sending, use pairdrop.
snapdrop and pairdrop app from fdroid for Android, pairdrop website in desktop.
You can just use the website instead of app on phone too.
Sending over LAN is local - it doesn't go outside your own network.
If devices are on same WiFi, no pairing required.
You can also send across networks by pairing.
Now onto the four body problem!
The traffic is stuck in the traffic🚦
Poor bot did its thing, but the article starts off in a way it can’t handle well it seems.
Somehow reminds me of this
This is from termux
on my Android phone, not from my desktop/laptop.
Only gvim
is available in pkg, not vim
. I had the same surprise when I didn’t see vim
.
I wonder if this is heaven or hell 😅