Nah, I’m gonna blame JPEG
PabloSexcrowbar
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I suspect that your visual objection may be similar to mine, but over the past several years of being subjected to electron trash, using apps written in Qt kind of reminds me now of a simpler time. Nostalgia is a powerful drug, isn’t it?
That all being said, I do find myself preferring the look of GTK apps lately, in spite of the rather controversial direction their design has taken.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Technology@beehaw.org•My Car Is Becoming a Brick: EVs are poised to age like smartphones.English
2·1 day agoOh shit, I didn’t know that about Telo. That gives me a little more hope about it, though it still doesn’t have the same draw to me as the Slate does, Amazon involvement notwithstanding. Honestly, with how simple the Slate is, I’m curious how Amazon would even exert the same control over their vehicles as Tesla does (but not curious enough to want to find out, of course).
This is my hope. There are so many cross-platform GUI toolkits out there that are orders of magnitude more efficient than electron and nobody uses them. It’s not like GTK and Qt are difficult to learn. In fact, I find them easier to wrap my head around than a lot of the JS nonsense out there.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Technology@beehaw.org•Magnetic tape is going strong in the age of AI, and it's about to get even better – new design materials and capacity boosts mean it's still an enterprise favoriteEnglish
5·1 day agoYeah I just looked at prices for LTO drives and it made me wish optical was still a thing. $3500 for an LTO8 drive alone is more than the value of my entire homelab.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Technology@beehaw.org•My Car Is Becoming a Brick: EVs are poised to age like smartphones.English
2·1 day agoThe Slate seems like it’s almost there, but the range still kinda sucks. Telo looks promising too, but it has the same vaporware scent about it as the Aptera so who knows if it’ll ever happen.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Technology@beehaw.org•Plex’s crackdown on free remote streaming access starts this weekEnglish
10·1 day agoYou absolutely can access it from outside your network if you configure it that way.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Technology@beehaw.org•My Car Is Becoming a Brick: EVs are poised to age like smartphones.English
2·1 day agoOh yeah, I do remember looking at those too, but iirc they were all still at a significant range disadvantage compared to the model 3. Dunno about now, though.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Hyundai car requires $2000, app & internet access to fix your brakes - what the actual fEnglish
1·2 days agoIt costs more to implement the hardware necessary to lock them behind a paywall in the first place, though. And I’m not bullying you by telling you that the comparison you’re making between cars and stadiums is, in fact, utterly nonsensical. I’m not borrowing space in a stationary building for a set amount of time. I’m purchasing a product that already had the feature in the first place. If it’s already there, it’s already adding to the cost of the vehicle, and there is no additional cost to the manufacturer whether they use it or not. I’ve given you multiple examples of how this logic would look in other industries where there are actual parallels, but for some reason you keep coming back to the unbelievably fallacious idea that buying a car is somehow akin to renting a seat at a sports game. They are not the same, in case I wasn’t being clear enough.
The cost to install the hardware has already been paid. Fine. What extra monthly effort is required on the part of the manufacturer to ensure the continued functionality of the seat heater? The answer is NONE. Therefore, what right does the manufacturer have to demand a monthly payment for people to use the hardware which is, again, already fucking installed in the car they just spent $60,000+ on? It doesn’t require server time. You’re not hiring a dude to come out and warm up your seat with his butt every time you activate it. I repeat there is no continued cost to the manufacturer, therefore they have no justification for charging a monthly fee, and the only reason the price goes up is the extra hardware cost from installing the system that charges the monthly fee.
I’m done with this conversation. Please seek help.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Technology@beehaw.org•My Car Is Becoming a Brick: EVs are poised to age like smartphones.English
13·2 days agoThat’s when I bought mine, and it was either get a Model 3 with ~270 miles of range or a Nissan Leaf or a tiny BMW iQ, both with like 80.
For the record, if the software updates stopped where they’re at today, I’d be fine with how the car functions until the end of its life. In fact, I kinda wish they’d just leave things alone at this point because I don’t want any extra features out of the thing.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Hyundai car requires $2000, app & internet access to fix your brakes - what the actual fEnglish
1·2 days agoWhether they’re expecting it or not, the hardware is there and there is no additional technical intervention necessary from the manufacturer necessary for it to function. A monthly fee for a button to turn on my seat warmers is idiotic. Your bizarre infatuation with comparing cars to stadiums is also as frustrating as it is nonsensical.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Technology@beehaw.org•Magnetic tape is going strong in the age of AI, and it's about to get even better – new design materials and capacity boosts mean it's still an enterprise favoriteEnglish
10·2 days agoThis got me thinking that maybe I should grab an LTO drive to use for homelab backups.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Aneurysm Posting@sopuli.xyz•Thank goodness a will be provided! Man I love. Are always the best.English
2·2 days agoI can’t remember what the actual voicemail was about, but back in the early days of Google Voice, my dad left me one that got transcribed as “Hi, [name], I have the murder.”
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Does it ever bother some of you that "I'm switching to Linux!" is just more of a way to appear rebellious than actually committing to the choice?English
112·2 days agoIt kinda feels like the digital equivalent of “I’M MOVING TO CANADA” in a lot of cases.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.zip•An entire PS5 now costs less than 64GB of DDR5 memory, even after a discount — simple memory kit jumps to $600 due to DRAM shortage, and it's expected to get worse into 2026English
4·2 days agoIt crashed hard and it crashed fast after a prolonged period of unsustainable growth. Is that not a bubble?
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0264999321002327
But it is being used for train
-ing AI models.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Hyundai car requires $2000, app & internet access to fix your brakes - what the actual fEnglish
1·2 days agoIt’s absolutely nothing like that, my dude. There’s no extra service being provided. The product has been manufactured and purchased. It’d be like buying a drill only to find out that you have to pay a fee to use the drill bits you already own, or buying a block of wood and being told that you have to pay the seller money to use the tools you already own to make it into whatever you’re building.
PabloSexcrowbar@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.zip•An entire PS5 now costs less than 64GB of DDR5 memory, even after a discount — simple memory kit jumps to $600 due to DRAM shortage, and it's expected to get worse into 2026English
2·2 days agoThere was one a while ago, back when mining on GPUs was still viable. I wanna say the GTX 1000 series was still in vogue at the time.




I feel like there was definitely a golden age for printers, because when I was a kid we had an Epson Stylus Color 800 that was literally Satan crammed into a shitty beige box, but my HP LaserJet from like 2012 is still going strong.