idk, never worried about it but my main computer doesn’t have it so I just passively use that for important things
idk, never worried about it but my main computer doesn’t have it so I just passively use that for important things
cameras aren’t really about resolution or detail these days though
devs can ship games on steam without drm, it’s not valve that mandates it. ksp doesn’t have drm for example
is this sarcasm?
ngl web apps are even worse, they’re so bloated and janky, I wish everything had a native app
ltt is a tech lifestyle content company and I don’t like tech lifestyle + the existence of media conglomerates
omg ddcci :)
The problem with something like this is that people start to dislike it more with experience. People have to be less experienced to become more experienced, and so it’s a certainty that there will be a lot of moderators that misuse it.
I also don’t mean to sound like a gnome dev, but what is actually the use case for this?
I think the strike system would make sense and limiting by account age might work as well, but I don’t think the other simple methods of moderation are going to be that useful, as word blacklists always have false positives and auto community lockdown could be exploited by someone to sabotage a community. (like with a denial of service attack)
Also, this is just my opinion but I really hate it when software speaks to me like they’re real people, I understand that it is ultimately written by a person but when the same phrase is repeated to every person regardless of the context it just annoys me. Similiarly I don’t like the automod messages/comments on reddit because it just feels like low effort content in comparison to what real people post on there.
I think this would make more sense framed as a plugin rather than a bot, because a bot post is placed equally to a human post while being inherently lower importance.
If I were to suggest features it would be something like a large language model based content filter, but I understand the computational and cost limitations would make that challenging.
kde marble and a wwan card
was bored in w*ndows and kde looked cool
yeah agree
I like this project and just hope it was gplv3 or some similar copyleft license
this is different, oc is talking about “any admin”. Anyone can make a lemmy server and become a server admin from which they might be able to see the voters
I disagree, I think the current design is pretty good (though I preferred the layout in kde5)
I guess the biggest problem is how ugly tabs are in breeze?
The screen on the t430 is indeed horrible but I had a very modern laptop before this which was pretty high spec, and it had a even worse screen than this somehow (it was some horrendous IPS display, I don’t even understand how you mess it up that bad). Compared to that pile of garbage this is much better. The only problem is that you can’t replace the display on the t430 as easily as a modern (non-touchscreen) laptop because it uses the LVDS interface instead of the modern eDP interface.
2012 isn’t that bad, it even has usb3!
because you need the coreboot people to write firmware that can initialise the system, and that probably takes a lot of reverse engineering
I don’t know much about this, but I assume there’s little to no effort for corebooting on the amd side, I’ve only seen intel platforms with coreboot
this looks like a very skewed statistic, ofc the us looks bad because there’s only the most civilised European countries, Australia and the us included