I wonder why apt search on ubuntu and debian must be so bad: on mint each package has a single line and an easy letter telling you if the program is installed or not. On debian/ubuntu each program takes multiple lines, are all green and the only way to distinguish installed ones is to look for an (installed) string at the end of the first line. I like Mint’s apt version so much
Bobo The Great
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Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
TenForward: Where Every Vulcan Knows Your Name@lemmy.world•Soon enough, she'll be invited to the poker games
7·9 days agoWhy is the Enterprise NX-01 missing a nacelle?
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
TenForward: Where Every Vulcan Knows Your Name@lemmy.world•Also a great courtroom drama with guest star Riker
3·10 days agoPretty sure TNG did it way before with the traveller episode
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
Technology@lemmy.world•SODIMM-to-DIMM adapters offer a workaround for DDR5 price hikesEnglish
48·10 days agoThat feels so bad for signal integrity, especially at 5+ GT/s
Bobo The Great@startrek.websitetoInsanePeopleFacebook@lemmy.world•“the Yu-Gi-Oh deck theorycrafting”
1·12 days agoAlso doesn’t that mean Mr. Robert here fed chatgpt some numbers, that are presumably in the 120-130 range?
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is the technical hill you are willing to die on in your industry?
1·16 days agoAnd brakes as well. EV are, for the most part, greenqashing designed to sell you more cars you wouldn’t need in a better designed world.
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is the technical hill you are willing to die on in your industry?
1·17 days agoMy “everyone” was a bit too wide I think. I’m not talking about everyday people of course. I’m talking about 50+ employees companies, that would save money by hiring a sysadmin and running their own servers. I know of companies with thousands of employees that pay millions on Azure and AWS and have no in-house infrastructure. That’s how you get to Amazon running half of the internet
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is the technical hill you are willing to die on in your industry?
25·18 days agoIf you tell me gasoline yeah probably (diesel generator to power electric motors is done in big ships), caol I highly doubt it.
But apart from pollution per se, an electric car used everyday would require at least 50% of a household power budget to charge (2-3 kW). If every single ICE vehicle would be immediately swapped to electric, I doubt many countries would be able to cope with the increased power consumption. That’s why we need more energy infrastructure before a full switch. Or you know, less cars and more public transport.
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is the technical hill you are willing to die on in your industry?
1114·16 days agoElectric vehicles are not a solution for environmental problems, not now at least, they pollute when building the batteries and, unless nuclear energy is widespread, they will be powered by coal/gas making them pretty polluting. They will be a solution only when we have cleaner energy available.
Bonus: people should stop being lazy and learn to setup a server infrastructure instead of using “the cloud”. Your data are safer, you save money and give less power to gargantuan cloud companies.
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
Privacy@programming.dev•8 Million Users' AI Conversations Sold for Profit by "Privacy" Extensions
31·20 days agoIf a security researcher is installing on their browser a free vpn browser extension, I assume they are a moron and can’t do their job.
Seriously, not only your first question should be “how are these people paying for 6 millions people using their VPN?”, but your second one should be " why they don’t provide a client of a wireguard/ipsec/openvpn configuration file? So they don’t have access to my webpages?"
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What's the biggest case of planned obsolescence you've dealt with?
3·22 days agoI know, but many people barely know what “supported hardware even mean”, they will see the message " this computer won’t receive any more updates" and simply buy a new one.
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What's the biggest case of planned obsolescence you've dealt with?
481·23 days agoWindows 11 refusing to install on hardware it can absolutely run on.
IP rating on smartphones so there’s seals and glue everywhere and opening them up is a fucking nightmare.
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Linux is the reason Windows apps are bloated these days
1·23 days agoThat’s good, AppImage is still my favourite of the “distro-agnostic” package systems and I think it really is missing a central repository solution.
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Linux is the reason Windows apps are bloated these days
1·25 days agoIt’s a package repository, but I would hardly call it “central”
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What programming language would you recommend for teaching to non-technical people that use a variety of different OSes?
4·25 days agoI don’t know, my experience with python is “sudo apt install python3” on linux and “download the installer on windows and run it”, I see many comments mentionting python difficilt to install but I really can’t see why
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Linux is the reason Windows apps are bloated these days
41·27 days agoI’m not saying that’s not true.
I’m saying I’ve almost never downloaded a Flatpak that didn’t require a new dependency downloaded.
When I removed all my flatpk some time ago, I had: Steam, Viking, Discord, FreeCad and Flatseal to manage them. All of them and their dependencies used something arounx 17 GB of disk space (most of which was of course several versions of dependency runtimes), and that was after I removed all the unused runtimes that forn some reason it doesn’t remove after I uninstall or they are upgraded.
I’m sure if I installed more Flatpaks, some dependencies would eventually be reused, but you still need a good collection of them at any given time. So in pracrice you still need a lot lf space unfortunately.
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What programming language would you recommend for teaching to non-technical people that use a variety of different OSes?
24·27 days agoC is full of complex paradigms and low level details that are great if you’re learning computer architectures, but pretty bad if it’s your first languages.
Python in the other hand is great to learn programming practices and for quick, non-optimized, easy scripts. I think it’s less suited for more complex projects, but that’s another thing. I honestly fon’t think it’s a great language, but it’s easy to use and has pretty much a library for everything, that’s why I think it’s good to start and for simple things.
Java is also quite high level, so also good for beginners, but I’ve never used it so I don’t know how easy is to setup (python is) and how easy it is to download dependencies (on python it is).
For your case I would say Python is best.
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Linux is the reason Windows apps are bloated these days
1·27 days agoI don’t know if it’s still the case, but up to a couple of years ago, Flatpak was configured so that externally mounted folders were not accessible. I discovered that when Steam on flatpak refused to install games on my hdd, and it was quite frustrating to figure out how to enable it. Still, it’s difficult to criticize how “bloated” are electron apps (they are) when I need to download 2GB or runtime for an 80MB telegram binary
Snaps integration is even worse as I’ve seen browser extensions state they straight don’t work on snap’s browsers. Also desktop integration on gnone (even files drag and drop between snaps) are broken on the ubuntu installations I tried.
Appimages have the least drawbacks and are my preferred methods between the three (at least they take less storage space than an equivalent Flarpak for some reason, but are still broken sometimes), yet they still miss a central package repository, and that’s a big problem.
Bobo The Great@startrek.websiteto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Linux is the reason Windows apps are bloated these days
46·27 days agoAppimages are usually quite reasonable in size, it’s Flatpak that usually require 2/3 GB per app since every package has its own version of KDE/Gnome or other runtimes so every app still has to download a new one.
Because 1) EU laws defend the customers a lot more and 2) US companies have already so much power and money, they can fuck over you easier, and you don’t have easier alternatives, or at least some people pretend you don’t