On iOS I’ve been using Vinegar - Tube Cleaner
by developer And a Dinosaur. It doesn’t replace YouTube as a whole - only the video player. Better interface, no ads.
On iOS I’ve been using Vinegar - Tube Cleaner
by developer And a Dinosaur. It doesn’t replace YouTube as a whole - only the video player. Better interface, no ads.
Ah NFS… It’s so good when it works! When it doesn’t though, figuring out why is like trying to navigate someone else’s house in pitch dark.
FUD wars on Free and Open Source Software, shady deals with companies and governments to make them dependent on MS software and solutions, holding the web hostage to IE “standards”, …
That makes zero sense. Where did you get that idea from?
For reference, here are their docs describing key management. https://tailscale.com/blog/tailscale-key-management
I found Tailscale to be easier to install and configure than ZeroTier, and also to have better performance.
I have never used Twingate.
Could you provide a source for this claim? Not doubting you but I haven’t seen it.
Hey! Sorry you had these bad experiences.
My setup is on Debian testing
and is documented on this blog post: https://blog.c10l.cc/09122023-debian-gaming
I don’t have an Nvidia card but other than that, this should give you a head start, including virtual surround on headphones if that’s your thing!
I promise it’s not a lot of work and I tried to make it all easy to follow (feedback welcome though!).
If you decide to give it a go, let me know how it went!
Even when you’re not sending data that you consider sensitive, it’s helping train their models (and you’re paying for it!).
Also what’s not sensitive to one person might be extremely sensitive to another.
Also something you run locally, by definition, can be used with no Internet connection (like writing code on a plane or in a train tunnel).
For me as a consultant, it means I can generally use an assistant without worrying about privacy policies on the LLM provider or client policies related to AI and third parties in general.
For me as an individual, it means I can query the model away without worrying that every word I send it will be used to build a profile of who I am that can later be exploited by ad companies and other adversaries.
I understand the benefits of running things locally, but why not just use Google’s or OpenAI’s LLM?
I understand the benefits of cutting down sugar, but why not just binge on cake and ice cream?
Sounds like you don’t understand the benefits of running things, and specifically LLMs and other kinds of AI models locally.
I’ve been using glauth + Authelia for a couple years with no issues and almost zero maintenance.
Yes, absolutely. Ideally there would be an automated check that runs periodically and alerts if things don’t work as expected.
Monitoring if the backup task succeeded is important but that’s tue easy part of ensuring it works.
A backup is only working if it can be restored. If you don’t test that you can restore it in case of disaster, you don’t really know if it’s working.
Ah got it. I didn’t know there was a free tier!
How do you use ChatGPT anonymously? It requires a valid login linked to a payment method. It doesn’t get any less anonymous than that.
The main “instability” I’ve found with testing
or sid
is just that because new packages are added quickly, sometimes you’ll have dependency clashes.
Pretty much every time the package manager will take care of keeping things sane and not upgrading a package that will cause any incompatibility.
The main issue is if at some point you decide to install something that has conflicting dependencies with something you already have installed. Those are usually solvable with a little aptitude
-fu as long as there are versions available to sort things out neatly.
A better first step to newer packages is probably stable
with backports
though.
Not much use to go Ubuntu or Mint, unless you have specific issues with Debian that don’t happen with those. Even then, it may be one apt install
away from a fix.
If you want to try out BSD, power to you. I wouldn’t experiment on a backup computer though, unless by backup you just mean you want to have the spare hardware and will format it with Debian if you ever need to make it your main computer anyway.
Otherwise, just run Debian!
Up until a few months ago, Vulkan was very unstable on BG3. It’s been fine for a while though. I haven’t made performance or smoothness comparisons though, I just default to Vulkan and it’s been fine.
I don’t mind the order of path, arguments and options, but what the hell is the deal with long arguments with a single dash? i.e. -name
instead of —-name
Stability is no longer an advantage when you are cherry picking from Sid lol.
This makes no sense. When 95% of the system is based on Debian stable
, you get pretty much full stability of the base OS. All you need to pull in from the other releases is Mesa and related packages.
Perhaps the kernel as well, but I suspect they’re compiling their own with relevant parameters and features for the SD anyway, so not even that.
The public keys can be stored anywhere, it doesn’t matter. That’s why they’re called public: because they’re not private, they’re not sensitive, they’re not a secret.