- 8 Posts
- 33 Comments
thehatfox@lemmy.worldto 3DPrinting@lemmy.world•3D Printing A Modular Guitar Means It Can Look Like Whatever You WantEnglish141·3 months agoThe owner’s phone:
There are 4 bay units that would fit on a 10” inch shelf. I’ve seen some DIY projects too.
Using SFF/mini PCs is also popular, there are models that can take multiple SATA/NVMe drives
There are few if any 10” UPS units available anyway so weight is less of a worry. It’s one of the biggest weaknesses of the 10” system currently.
thehatfox@lemmy.worldto retrocomputing@lemmy.sdf.org•Installing Windows NT on the Nintendo Wii!English4·5 months agoAlso works on the GameCube, albeit with much more limited IO due to the lack of USB.
The GameCube Can Now Run Windows
I’m not sure there’s much fun software compiled for PowerPC Windows NT to run on it though (yet).
Back in the PS2/Xbox/Gamecube era the SNES and Megadrive seemed to be retro while the PS1 and N64 were just “old”. So maybe 2 generations ago is the start of retro.
I think it’s definitely a lot blurrier now though. The differences between consoles and the leaps between generations are less pronounced, and there are so many y rereleases and remasters now keeping older games fresh.
thehatfox@lemmy.worldto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•I mean, that's literally the opposite of what I wantEnglish1·7 months agoI’m also using iOS in the UK. I just tried searching for Pixelfed in the App Store and the ad was for some sort of golf tutoring app.
The top search result was the Pixelfed app and the others all other Fediverse apps.
Power costs vary a lot around the world, depending on where OP lives every little saving can help.
thehatfox@lemmy.worldto Fediverse@lemmy.world•Why BlueSky Isn’t the Alternative to X (Formerly Twitter) You’re Looking For — and Why Mastodon Is the Better Choice Over X, Threads, and BlueSkyEnglish2·9 months agoThat’s a gross assumption that people care about any of this.
For any form of federated community to be sustainable, its users have to care about that. Otherwise those communities will eventually be consumed by whichever instance gains the critical mass to close itself off and become another Twitter or Reddit.
To achieve the benefits of federation, users must be educated on principles of federation, not be obfuscated from them. The question is how the Fediverse can do that.
I have an X220 with an i5-2520M, I don’t use it for gaming but I have briefly played Half-Life 2 with it and it was comfortably playable.
So I would say mid-2000s titles and before will be fine. It really depends on the age the Thinkpad you want is, and the age of the games you want to play.
Seems a pointless endeavour. The open and enterprise sides are so deeply linked, it makes sense that they share a brand.
Separating them only weakens the broader SUSE ecosystem.
thehatfox@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.ml•Study Finds That 52 Percent of ChatGPT Answers to Programming Questions Are WrongEnglish41·1 year agoGenerally you want to the reference material used to improve that first version to be correct though. Otherwise it’s just swapping one problem for another.
I wouldn’t use a textbook that was 52% incorrect, the same should apply to a chatbot.
thehatfox@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Jolla's Sailfish OS is moving to a subscription model, new phone (and a privacy-focused AI device) coming soon - LiliputingEnglish15·1 year agoSeems a hard sell to go subscription on such a niche platform. I wish anyone luck that could challenge the Apple/Android duopoly though.
thehatfox@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•KDE Plasma 6.1 Lands Dynamic Triple Buffering SupportEnglish19·1 year agoAs an aside, can we get back into desktop cubes again? With all the upheaval in Windows land it’s the sort of eye candy that can win over new Linux users.
thehatfox@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Can anyone recommend a lightweight, stable distro for a thinkpad?English6·1 year agoAny distro should be fairly stable and supported on an older Thinkpad.
I’m currently using Debian stable on my X220 and it’s rock solid.
thehatfox@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•GNU nano 8.0 Released with New Options and Various ImprovementsEnglish30·1 year agoUsing nano as a vim user is a lot less clunky than trying to use vim as a vim non-user though.
Or so I would imagine, all of the vim novices are still too busy trying to exit vim to share their experiences.
thehatfox@lemmy.worldto retrocomputing@lemmy.sdf.org•The BASIC programming language turns 60English7·1 year agoThere are so many weird and wonderful BASIC dialects found on all sorts of platforms.
In Europe the PlayStation 2 shipped with a version of Yabasic on the bundled demo disc. It was an attempt to avoid some of import taxes by claiming the PS2 was a computer instead of a games console.
thehatfox@lemmy.worldto retrocomputing@lemmy.sdf.org•The BASIC programming language turns 60English7·1 year agoThere is an open source implementation of BBC Basic for modern systems that’s being actively developed - BBC BASIC for SDL 2.0.
thehatfox@lemmy.worldto Firefox@lemmy.ml•Firefox@lemmy.ml: Is it possible to duplicate a tab without reloading it, like actually make a copy of it?English1·1 year agoModern websites are so complex and dynamic now it makes saving their state next to impossible.
For a while I’ve been longing for something similar, but for going forwards and backwards in a tab. There’s been too many times when I hit back to look at something I missed, only to find it was some dynamically loaded element that changes when the page is reopened.
thehatfox@lemmy.worldtoUnixporn@lemmy.ml•switching to Linux because Windows ui are so boring (KDE is love KDE is life, I want to marry KDE) English22·1 year agoCompiz won over so many new users back then. Wobbly windows and desktop cubes may not have been super practical, but they sure looked impressive.
I would also recommend openSUSE Tumbleweed. I’m usually a Debian/Debian-based person but I’ve been running Tumbleweed on my desktop for a few years now and it’s been great.
It has a few peculiarities like any distro but it’s been very stable, with few issues even with things like Nvidia drivers. Docs and community seem good too.