@avlcharlie@mastodon.social
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

avlcharlie

@avlcharlie@mastodon.social

I've seen things
I've done things
I've made things
I've conquered things

Most of all, I just want the world to be a better place for everyone.

Every single human.

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

itsfoss, (edited ) to linux
@itsfoss@mastodon.social avatar

Miss you Windows. (I don't) ๐Ÿ˜ฆ

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@itsfoss
via Pink Floyd
Goodbye all you Windows I'm leaving you today goodbye, goodbye, goodbye.

Goodbye all you updates there's nothing you can say to make me change my mind goodbye.

dangillmor, to random
@dangillmor@mastodon.social avatar

A reminder that less than two weeks ago, it was revealed that Trump solicited a $1 billion bribe from the energy industry, offering in return the gutting of environmental regulations.

A week ago, Big Journalism had already consigned this epic scandal to the memory bin.

Had Biden done anything remotely like that, I guarantee that it would still be among the top stories of the day -- and Congress, including Democrats, would be moving toward impeachment.

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@dangillmor
News is run by people who want Trump to win so they can make more money. They really don't care about anything else.

itsfoss, to windows
@itsfoss@mastodon.social avatar

Oh no, Microsoft, what have you done? ๐Ÿ˜ฑ

https://news.itsfoss.com/microsoft-windows-creepy-ai-move/

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@itsfoss
My gut tells me this is about training data for models.. I am so unbelievably grateful I'm all Linux..

itsfoss, (edited ) to linux
@itsfoss@mastodon.social avatar

Share with us ๐Ÿ™‚

#linux #linuxgaming

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@itsfoss
While I personally gave up PC gaming a long time ago for consoles, I'm glad it's getting the attention and support and finally becoming a viable gaming platform because way too many people use that as an excuse to hang on to Windows.

gutenberg_org, to science
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

in 1618.

Johannes Kepler confirms his previously rejected discovery of the third law of planetary motion (he first discovered it on March 8 but soon rejected the idea after some initial calculations were made).

The elliptical orbits of planets were indicated by calculations of the orbit of Mars. The third law expresses that the farther a planet is from the Sun, the slower its orbital speed, and vice versa.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kepler%27s_laws_of_planetary_motion

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@gutenberg_org
The other weird law that he found was that planets sweep the same area for time. If you take the elliptical path over time and create a pie shaped wedge from the focal point, no matter how distant or how close, the area of the pie shape will be the same in the same amount of time. Weird but true.

itsfoss, to random
@itsfoss@mastodon.social avatar

Your thought on Ubuntu's Flutter push?

https://news.itsfoss.com/google-ubuntu-flutter/

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@itsfoss
If you go all in on a Google app or service that isn't directly related to their advertising biz, you should be ready to have it pulled out from under you. History don't lie.

gutenberg_org, (edited ) to books
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

British astronomer and astrophysicist Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin was born in 1900.

In 1925 she proposed that stars were composed primarily of hydrogen and helium. Her groundbreaking conclusion was initially rejected, because it contradicted the science of the time, which held that no significant elemental differences distinguished the Sun and Earth. Independent observations eventually proved that she was correct.

Books by Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin are coming soon at PG.

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@gutenberg_org
So many women in history brushed aside to later be found right.

dangillmor, (edited ) to random
@dangillmor@mastodon.social avatar

Does anyone know of a way to buy an EV that doesn't relentlessly spy on the driver/passengers and send the data to whoever the carmaker feels like selling it to?

Related: Does anyone know of a service in the Bay Area that will disable all the surveillance that was, without my knowledge or permission, built into a 2008 Prius?

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@dangillmor
There was recently a lawsuit in the US that the car companies won about gathering and selling your data. By our legal system they are allowed to capture texts, location, and any other data they care and sell it to whoever they want. So in answered your question probably not.

QasimRashid, to random
@QasimRashid@mastodon.social avatar

I cannot logically discuss Israel/Gaza with people who believe this atrocity began with Hamas war crimes on 10/7.

We should reject such bad faith propagandaโ€”and instead do this for actual peace & justice for Palestine and Israel.

Read & subscribe to my latest:
https://qasimrashid.substack.com/p/the-history-prior-to-107-that-media

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@QasimRashid
It seems to me, and I am very uninformed, that the first step needs to be everyone recognize Palestine set up the borders and the government. It seems they have lived in this gray area for 60 years and I'm not really sure why. Like I said I'm very uninformed so maybe this is just terribly simplistic.

liampomfret, to random
@liampomfret@mastodon.social avatar

Interested in getting a proper NAS set up. Without having used one before, am I better off just buying one off the shelf, or is it reasonable/cheaper to build one using open source software? I've still got an old Fractal Design Define R4 that would fit plenty of drives, though I expect I'd need to buy everything else โ€” wouldn't want to run it on an old i5-4690.

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@liampomfret
Rolling your own is cheaper but requires more work to get going. Depending on your skill level it could be difficult. Off the shelf is nice for people who are a little savvy but don't necessarily want to break out a command prompt. Personally I'm a geek so I just set up a computer with some shares and I also use it to run some media stuff.

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@liampomfret
You've hit most of it directly on the head. What I wanted was some storage and a media server where I could stream videos or pictures or whatever. I've been Linux for 15 years but I'm lazy about it and I always use the GUI if I can. I'm just using an old laptop with Linux mint xfce since it's the lightest. I've got 10 terabytes in USB hard drives(a couple of them) and run Emby server for $5 a month.

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@liampomfret
Some of the difficult points are getting the USB drives mounted at boot to be shared and permissions on various things. Those will be your headaches in general.

In using Linux I highly recommend Mint. If you were dabbling I would also wander into KDE desktop versions. It's very pretty and arguably better than Windows at windows interface

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@liampomfret
My USB drives spin down and I reboot that machine about once a year. The performance is decent so I don't mess with it. And it's a laptop on purpose because power.. If you do a ton of SATA drives take a peek at raid, especially if you get matching drives

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@liampomfret
That's not the worst idea about using your PC and upgrading. I guess like almost anything you can spend a little or a lot or anything in between. My system doesn't have redundancy but I'm okay with it. Once you get raid going it's kind of like a different level. There are some really good OS systems in Linux designed just for NAS but that's all they do.

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@liampomfret
One other thing before I forget. A lot of times your network storage speed is determined by your network speed and not the hardware. You can have super fast hard drives but if you're network isn't super fast it really doesn't matter, in other words. Might be something to test out.

itsfoss, (edited ) to linux
@itsfoss@mastodon.social avatar

Comment ๐Ÿง

#linux

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@itsfoss
The knowledge that this is not windows, why, and how.
(I guess that's not an app but all newcomers should know that)

itsfoss, to android
@itsfoss@mastodon.social avatar

Here's a cool Mastodon Android client!

https://news.itsfoss.com/moshidon/

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@itsfoss
Excellent choice. It's been my client for a while now and it's very good.

nixCraft, to random
@nixCraft@mastodon.social avatar

this

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@nixCraft
For me as you gain experience you gain a war chest of things that work and the battle wounds from those that didn't to know better.

gamingonlinux, to random
@gamingonlinux@mastodon.social avatar

I love getting *fan mail because Iโ€ฆdonโ€™t have enough time to cover everything

*hate

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@gamingonlinux
Social media Karen speaks to the manager.. lol

itsfoss, to linux
@itsfoss@mastodon.social avatar
avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@itsfoss
WOW..

gutenberg_org, to books
@gutenberg_org@mastodon.social avatar

German physicist Arnold Sommerfeld died in 1951.

In 1916, he introduced the idea of elliptical orbits for electrons, and he also introduced additional quantum numbers which included the azimuthal quantum number and magnetic quantum number. He also introduced a dimensionless physical constant known as the fine-structure constant. This constant characterizes the strength of the electromagnetic interaction between elementary charged particles.

https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/16264

Title page of the book "Atomic Structure and Spectral Lines" by Arnold Sommerfeld, translated by Henry L. Brose, with 125 figures, published by Methuen & Co. Ltd., London.

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@gutenberg_org
Ok.. I'm a big physics buff and I thought I knew a lot but you have shown me more than two different physicists of great importance that I had no idea about. Thank you and keep up the good work! :-)

dangillmor, to random
@dangillmor@mastodon.social avatar

If what's being charged in this case is true -- an employee using "AI" to make a fake audio of his boss saying terrible things -- I hope he goes to jail for a serious stretch.

We are, to put it mildly, not prepared for the avalanche of malicious, synthetic lies coming soon.

https://www.thebaltimorebanner.com/education/k-12-schools/eric-eiswert-ai-audio-baltimore-county-YBJNJAS6OZEE5OQVF5LFOFYN6M/

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@dangillmor
Imho, the real problem will be when people start blaming AI on things they actually did.

arstechnica, to random
@arstechnica@mastodon.social avatar

Business groups sue FTC to block ban on noncompetes, claim they help workers

Noncompete clauses "benefit employers and workers alike," Chamber tells court.

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2024/04/business-groups-sue-ftc-to-block-ban-on-noncompetes-claim-they-help-workers/?utm_brand=arstechnica&utm_social-type=owned&utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social

avlcharlie,
@avlcharlie@mastodon.social avatar

@arstechnica
Noncompete clauses "benefit employers and workers alike,"

I laughed so hard I shot milk out of my nose.

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