

Somewhere between Linux woes, gaming, open source, 3D printing, recreational coding, and occasional ranting.
🇬🇧 / 🇩🇪




Basically: “it’s not meant to be taken too serious”


Nicht verändert. Einfach ungeprüft als Fakten darstellt. Wie man mit “kritischen Daten” aus der Nazizeit in den USA Stimmung macht, das darfst du dir selbst ergründen, so klug bist du nämlich.


Ever heard of parents? It’s not the job of the OS or the browserto monitor and control a kids internet access.
In most jurisdictions you need to be an adult to legally get an Internet access.
So people using the Internet are either adults or under the supervision of adults.


Die machen das sicher nicht aus Spaß an der Freude.


The browsers sooner or later will always respond “18+” and do not ask the OS.


Das ist ein US-Projekt glaubst du, die interessieren sich für so “unbedeutende Details”? Da geht es Wahlweise um Stimmungsmache oder um Geld.


built in GTK4/libadwaita
So basically a Gnome app. *scnr*


… magnetische Materialien gilt diese empirische Regel nicht. Denn die Reibungskraft magnetischer Flächen steigt nicht stetig, sondern ist im mittleren Abstand am stärksten. Der Grund dafür sind konkurrierende Einflüsse lokaler und übergeordneter Magnetfelder, wie Forscher in „Nature Materials“ berichten.


Well—that is certainly a meticulous observation 👍
Time to roll back various workarounds in dozens of projects.


All that is missing now, is a link to the git repository.


< Wholesome 100 >


Thank you! 2FAuth looks very promising. Especially with the Android app! I need to check out the repo and history when I’m back home, though. It seems to be a one-man show.


We should make it more clear, that it is not “Mastodon is the thing” but “ActivityPub is the thing, and Mastodon is just one of many implementations”


Aegis seems to be just an app. The thing is, that I see an app as second option for accessing the data. I’d like to have a selfhosted service that is accessible independent from a device and – for convenience – has an app, too.
It’s the normal driver in the state it was when Nvidia dropped support. @Ooops@feddit.org described it very well.
I don’t know the situation with Ubuntu, but on Arch Linux older Nvidia drivers are available as legacy driver DKMS modules working with the current kernel and tools.
So basically: Yes, this will work on a technical level.
My 1080 is supported by one of the legacy driver packages and is roughly 10 years old now.
I am pretty sure something similar exists for Ubuntu.


Ethically, yes.
Technologically, no. By magnitudes.