[-] beigeoat@110010.win 26 points 10 months ago

In hindi we call it "old lady hair"

[-] beigeoat@110010.win 22 points 10 months ago

For some reason they just don't want to give up.

A lot of places still use it, they don't know about LibreOffice. They also don't understand that it's not being updated.

[-] beigeoat@110010.win 22 points 11 months ago

AMD is getting better for ML/scientific computing very fast for the regular consumer GPUs. I have seen the pytorch performance more than double on my 6700xt in 6 months to the point that it has better performance than a 3060(not ti).

[-] beigeoat@110010.win 6 points 11 months ago

Please no, this is incredibly dangerous. They didn't stop at giving people AI which gave developers incredibly untrusted and deceptive code. Now they want to run this code without oversight.

People are going to be rm -rf /* by the AI and will only then understand how stupid of an idea this is.

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[-] beigeoat@110010.win 7 points 11 months ago

This plus any LLM model is incapable of critical thinking. It can imitate it to the point where people might think it's able to, but that's just because it has seen the answers to the problems people are asking during the training process.

[-] beigeoat@110010.win 13 points 11 months ago

I'll just drop this here. The whole thing is pretty dumb. They probably did this cause the opposition parties fromed an alliance called the INDIA Alliance.

https://www.businesstoday.in/latest/trends/story/comes-from-rig-veda-mythologist-devdutt-pattanaik-on-the-origins-of-india-bharat-397162-2023-09-06

[-] beigeoat@110010.win 7 points 11 months ago

I think you don't understand how indian political system work. In India the Prime minister is elected by the people and has a similar position to the President of United States.

Modi's party got majority seats in the previous election.

The President of India is more of a ceremonial role. It is one of the duties of the President to appoint the Prime minister. In this scenario the President really doesn't have a choice.

[-] beigeoat@110010.win 8 points 11 months ago

This is a very hard topic to take a side on.

The razing of these shantytowns has been happening for quite a few years now and has mostly become a part of daily life. In preparation for G20 they have only speed up this in some places.

The reason for razing these places has been simply because of them being built on Unauthorised land and people encroaching on government land.It is also true that the people were being provided basic necessities like electricity and water even when living illegally, with bills in their names address to the unauthorised building.(It is important to note electricity and water bills are controlled by the gov in Delhi)

The Government is correct in their try to reclaim stolen land from illegal occupiers. But it is also true that the residents were promised permanent legal housing right where their houses stood.

The residents were wrong to occupy government land illegally, but it is also morally wrong to remove thousands of people suddenly.

[-] beigeoat@110010.win 8 points 11 months ago

This usually depends on the country/region. For example in India ikea is obscenely expensive for what they are selling when you can get a miles better product at a similar price.

At least in Delhi you can get really really good furniture at a fair price.

[-] beigeoat@110010.win 22 points 11 months ago

Hot take: it doesn't feel nice to have a change forced.

It should be the personal preference of the user to decide whether to use native or snap/flatpak. If native package manager decide to not support the package any longer it would be better to make user aware and stop maintaining app, than to install a snap package. This is a user's decision.

Also this can have far reaching consequences. Imagine you cannot use/install snaps on your machine due some reason, what now?

[-] beigeoat@110010.win 9 points 1 year ago

A few reasons other than privacy to use linux:

  1. Drivers for majority of the software are already installed. This means for most devices, it is just plug and play, no need to scour the internet for device drivers.
  2. Installing and updating packages through package manager is a much-much better solution than going to websites, downloading installer, than installing the software and then remembering to update each and every piece of software.
  3. Customization, you make the UI look and behave like you please. It is my belief that the UI should be user-specific not how a certain company feels a UI should be like.
  4. Much better OS updates, Updating the OS doesn't all the time require restart (you should do that anyway), but OS updates don't happen suddenly forcing themselves, when you maybe doing something important.
  5. Printing is a much better experience. This may not be for all, but I print stuff regularly, but I had issues with printers on windows, that I don't have on linux. Cups and Sane are amazing.
  6. Its just faster and runs like a champ, even on old hardware.
  7. No ads. This shouldn't even be a thing, but microsoft in their infinite wisdom, show ads on a OS that the user has paid for.
  8. You can uninstall any software you don't want. Don't like firefox as default browser? just uninstall and use whatever you want. Don't like your file explorer? there are quite a few to choose from, or don't want to have a file explorer? the choice is yours.
  9. You should explore it, you should check out what all it has to offer, try different desktop environments, try tiling window managers, maybe you will find something you really like. Virtual desktops for example, in my personal opinion are done much better on linux than on windows/mac.

After you setup Linux to your requirements, there really isn't a reason to use windows.

A few reasons not to use linux:

  1. Your work/school require that you use windows/mac.
  2. Some hardware that is necessary for you doesn't have linux support/drivers.
  3. Some software(this applies to games as well) you use is not available/work on linux and the alternative doesn't exist, or the alternative isn't good or you really require that specific software.
  4. You are happy with your OS. This is a perfectly fine, use whatever you are comfortable with.

If you do decide to use linux a few recommendations:

  1. If you plan on using linux for a long term, use something like debian (or debian based, ubuntu is fine, but I don't like it)/redhat based distro like alma or rocky . These are stable and for the most part you can just install them and forget about them. Arch is good, but you have so many updates daily, it kind of takes a toll on you. fedora,opensuse are a good middle ground if you want regular software/os updates but not daily.

You may also be interested in something like NixOS. Check it out, it is a really interesting project but it isn't I would say yet for majority of the users.

  1. try out different Desktop environments, I would say this is much more important than your choice of distro. Experience them all and pick one you find the best for yourself. Do this in a VM, trust me on this.
[-] beigeoat@110010.win 10 points 1 year ago

I did not know this, I thought there were being done here. Sorry if this troubled you, will keep this in mind moving forward.

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beigeoat

joined 1 year ago