

Walk fuck with your cancer ai?
Flikker op met je klote-AI!
De Hoog-geleerde Dr. Antonio Magino, proffesoor en Matimaticus der Stadt Bolonia in Lombardyen.
Walk fuck with your cancer ai?
Flikker op met je klote-AI!
Eh. No idea how it was exactly marketed, but from reading the article people were clearly expecting, and paying for, a holographic concert, and they didn’t get that at all. Seems to me like they’ve simply been misled through no fault of their own.
Seems more like the original picture has been used as an image prompt for an AI image generator, to just make it look a bit different.
Though I may be misunderstanding and stating the obvious.
I wanted to use my super amazing Samsung AI to summarise the post, but it tells me it can’t because it contains ‘inappropriate content’ :(
(The words ‘fuck’ and ‘shit’ are enough, apparently)
Alright, I’ll be here if you need any help!
It works the same in English, though, just with the suffix ‘-ish’ (and a number of other suffixes) instead of Dutch ‘-se’. You could literally translate ‘Goudse kaas’ as ‘Goudish cheese’, Gouda just never gets the ‘-ish’ suffix (or any suffix at all, really) in English.
We actually call it ‘Goudse kaas’, though. ‘Gouda’ is just the city of Gouda.
I thought Facebook executives could be ‘infamous’ at best.
When you’re talking about homogenisation of art, do you have any articles/sources? Sounds interesting.
Fair enough.
Caps lock works the same as windows.
Capslock definitely doesn’t work the same as in Windows. If it did, I wouldn’t need to run a weird script to get it to behave like how I’m used to after more than twenty years of using Windows. I’m not the only one with this problem either (this is actually exactly the reason why someone went and made said script), nor is it only present in OpenSUSE. I’ve read it’s a general Linux thing, and I can at least say it’s on Mint as well. Interestingly (though unrelatedly) on Samsung Dex as well.
Another difference in behavior I’ve noticed is that in Windows, if you press capslock to turn it off, it does so upon pressing the key. In Linux, it does so only after releasing the key. Pretty weird.
Firefox restoring session no matter what: I’ll try that and get back to you.
No need, ikidd@lemmy.world suggested deinstalling the default Firefox installation and then installing it as a flatpak; this fixed the issue.
It seems to have done the trick, cheers! I do get the ‘Your Firefox session has closed unexpectedly, do you want to recover it?’ screen, but I read earlier that Firefox on Linux indeed thinks it has crashed when it’s not closed the ‘proper’ way, which is by closing it from the menu. It doesn’t do this on Windows, which is really odd. But I should be able to just turn off that screen in about:config. Perfect.
I already had that turned on as I want to start with a completely new session everytime anyway.
Interesting idea. I’ll give that a shot soon.
I’m going more for a mix between Windows 7 and 11 with more colour:
That’s turned off, yes.
My first positive is first for a reason, indeed :)
Do you need Timeshift on an opensuse system? I haven’t used Leap, but had a Tumbleweed install for years which has Snapper pre installed.
To be honest, I just installed Timeshift because I first tried Mint and that had Timeshift pre-installed, so it’s the only program I knew for making backups.
The firefox thing seems just firefox behaviour to me. Does it not do that in Windows?
It really doesn’t. The first thing I’ve been doing is getting everything to behave as much like I’ve been used to on Windows, and this Firefox behavior is really sticking out like a sore thumb. But I’ll fix it at some point, hopefully.
Thanks for all the helpful information :)
Not to be confused with Intelligence Phonetic Artificial.