I have a book on learning Pytorch, this XKCD is in the first chapter and implementing this is the first code practice. It’s amazing how things progress.
Developer, 11 year reddit refugee
I have a book on learning Pytorch, this XKCD is in the first chapter and implementing this is the first code practice. It’s amazing how things progress.
I’m really enjoying Otterwiki. Everything is saved as markdown, attachments are next to the markdown files in a folder, and version control is integrated with a git repo. Everything lives in a directory and the application runs from a docker container.
It’s the perfect amount of simplicity and is really just a UI on top of fully portable standard tech.
It’s an understandable response. They were previously in a position where this was such an obvious concept that it didn’t merit any thought, and now they are required to have an understanding of networking and federation in order to understand how well actually this a fundamental part of how distributed systems work and isn’t technically a bug.
From their perspective this seems like a fairly straightforward problem. Obviously (to us) it’s not, but the threshold for the fediverse shouldn’t be that you deeply understand federation if there’s ever going to be meaningful adoption.
As an aside, your personal domain is timing out.
This is not obvious to anyone who doesn’t have some understanding of how networking and federation work, which is most people. Especially if we’re talking about users who have only ever experienced centralized platforms.
It should be called “Known Network” or something more transparent that doesn’t require an explanation of indexing
This is a known bug in 0.18.3, a fix will be in the next release:
Same experience in Argentina and Paraguay
I think it’s a bit silly to have megathreads just because some users can’t scroll past posts that doesnt interest them.
The problem is there are so goddamn many, to the extent that I’m working on a userscript that lets me entire hide posts that contain keywords. Checking my frontpage using Subscribed/Active, 5 of the first 20 posts are about this “news”. And that’s a full day after it happened, yesterday was far worse
Edit: The userscript is ready!
They keep updating the list every week even if you’re not listening. Also I’ve used their service for years so they have me pretty well figured out.
Unfortunately no, but any client that supports the subsonic api will work
Navidrome natively supports scrobbling. I also scrobble from Clementine on my desktop.
I’m downloading individual tracks much more than I’m downloading entire albums.
Anyone remember Firesheep?
Then that means the cost of the devices has already been factored into the base price of your contract. Nothing is free, companies don’t make money by giving away phones that they paid for. You’re just paying a higher base fee regardless of whether or not you get the hardware from them. By not taking the phone from them you’re increasing the profit margin they make on your monthly contract.
It’s not free, the cost is built into your monthly payment. This is how all carrier supplied phones are funded. If they allowed you to bring your own unlocked device they could charge you less. They wouldn’t, but they could because they wouldn’t need to recoup the hardware expense.
Yes, that’s my point.
Just because it’s not using your personal preference of containerization doesn’t qualify it as being “hacked together”. Docker is a perfectly acceptable solution for what Lemmy is.
I currently have it marking read on comment view, which is the default behavior of the current interface, however it shouldn’t be a problem to add that option
Edit: I actually quite like the name Loop 🤔
@[email protected]? She’s good people
Edit: Oh I assume you’re referring to the anime character in the post?
There’s no reason to allow root login, it’s asking for trouble. Password based login is even worse. Changing the SSH port just makes it harder for the drive-by bots trying the whole IPv4 range
How many of you actually disable root and password based login, change the default SSH port, and setup fail2ban?
Yes I do! It’s a pretty great overview that isn’t extremely math heavy
The book is “Deep Learning for Coders with Fastai and PyTorch: AI Applications Without a PhD”
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1492045527