danhab99

joined 2 years ago
[–] danhab99@programming.dev 11 points 3 months ago

I'm so upset that this isn't all that matters. Carriers usually setup really nice contracts with manufacturers for things like exclusivity and marketing.

[–] danhab99@programming.dev 2 points 3 months ago

I am 100% open to exploring other equally zero effort alternatives if only I had the time CURSE being an adult (ノಠ益ಠ)ノ . Is there anything better I should use, hopefully using existing ssh keys please.

[–] danhab99@programming.dev 6 points 3 months ago (2 children)

I still use sshfs. I can't be bothered to set up anything else I just want something that works out of the box.

[–] danhab99@programming.dev 7 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Does anyone vaguely remember those internet licenses from that Star Trek DS9 episode when they went back in time but it was the near future from the 80s perspective meaning that it's actually today?

We're going to have internet licenses soon

[–] danhab99@programming.dev 8 points 4 months ago (6 children)

A 1hr commute represents 16% of your day, how much of my day should be wasted commuting

[–] danhab99@programming.dev 12 points 4 months ago (8 children)

This is so lame for the arch community, like I use arch btws are supposed to be the most hardcore power users and they bugged a dev that badly! I don't know how many tutorial I saw about compiling arch and building everything yourself into a minimal setup.

You can't give me shit for using Manjaro for as long as I did, GLAD I LEFT.

can I say something a little stupidThx!

So I don’t think there’s anything inherently wrong with ignoring emails. Emails are a kinda public way for anyone to start a conversation with you. As developers, we include our emails in commits — but we don’t have to. I don’t think GitHub even checks whether the email addresses in commits are valid.

So yeah, if you have a valid reason to reach out to a developer, go ahead. But if that developer disagrees or doesn’t want to respond, that’s just how it is — you can’t make someone email you back.

I’m just being consistent with myself. I always tell my friends and family about the importance of the block button, and I’ll say the same thing here: just ignore it. And in this case someone would have eventually fixed the problem and submitted a PR.

~sry if I was condescending~

[–] danhab99@programming.dev 15 points 4 months ago

Rule of acquisition #85: Never let the competition know what you're thinking

In this case I interpret the competition to be the various payment processors that might be willing to serve for additional fees

[–] danhab99@programming.dev 3 points 4 months ago

I'm trying to make Ollama more accessible so I can replace Chatgpt.

  • I installed open-webui but I don't wanna deal with tls certs so now I gotta figure out a way to use ssh tunnels (I hate Wireguard)
  • I gotta figure out how Ollama can keep a model alive to answer me asap while not interrupting videogames
  • I want to build tools for open-webui so I can integrate my local AI with Google calendar and Jira, right now it's my open-api-toolkit project but it's not ready for me yet.

I realized how much info I've been pushing to Chatgpt and it feels like 10000x more that what I've exposed to Google or Instagram. I share with Chatgpt all my wildest secret project ideas and I don't want Chatgpt to have that anymore. I hope deleting my account will actually delete my chats but I know for a fact that that's a dream.

[–] danhab99@programming.dev 9 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Oh my gawd what a README!! I'm on my phone and I was trying to scroll back to the top of it from the bottom and I just kept on scrolling... Holy shit I'm going to put this on my kanban board give it proper attention

[–] danhab99@programming.dev 4 points 4 months ago

It's equally a pro and a con but for me it's a huge pro:

You can know exactly what your computer is doing because it will tell you!!

You can see highly verbose logs, granted it's not easy to interpret without the necessary skills but Chatgpt doesn't mind it if you dump 100 lines into a print and just say "fix my shit", I do that routinely. I hated how windows would just freeze up and flash a popup like "Program not working" and I have to guess what's going on by gauging the feeling of the software. I want exactly what I want to happen and Linux just does it without fighting me

[–] danhab99@programming.dev 2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

If you're using a 3rd party client like Boost or Voyager it might not recognize the pifed domain as an activitypub instance.. our friendly devs are doing there best

[–] danhab99@programming.dev 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

There is this brittle thing of foam everyone likes to make into weird shapes like little birds... I don't know what it is called and I don't want too

 

Recently my manjaro linux laptop had a pretty bad meltdown. My solution would usually be plugging in the live boot drive and fixing whatever happened, but that takes to long and I lost a working day because of it. I need a more brute-forcy way of backing up and recovering my machines. I'm thinking daily disk image backups that I can recover just by flashing the last days image. I have ~20tb worth of old harddrives that I could put into raid using a raspberry pi but I don't really trust them all that much.

I created this backup utility afew months ago but it's also not that great. Does anybody know a solution for uploading a disk image of my computer, encrypted locally on my machine, then upload it to s3?

 

He was 20

view more: ‹ prev next ›