[-] marmarama@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

British English voices those letters in most accents. I think the two silent letters is just a North American thing.

Similar to herb.

[-] marmarama@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

The WiFi card is probably a Realtek 8852AE, which has become very common in laptops since 2021. Unfortunately Realtek driver support tends to lag quite a bit.

If you want to run Ubuntu Desktop 22.04, then you're probably best off waiting a few weeks for the Ubuntu Desktop 22.04.4 point release. It's due sometime this month. It will boot and install an "HWE" (Hardware Enablement) kernel and drivers, that are based on the kernel from Ubuntu 23.04, and therefore should work out of the box with your WiFi card.

While it's possible to upgrade an existing Ubuntu 22.04 installation with the latest HWE kernel, doing it by downloading the relevant packages on another machine and moving them across using a USB stick is going to be somewhat frustrating if you've not done it before. You'll certainly learn a few things, but it may not be an enjoyable experience. I'm a grizzled Linux veteran, and I'm pretty sure I'd end up forgetting to download one or more packages and having to swap back and forth between machines.

In the meantime, I would just continue to use Ubuntu 23.04. In fact, if it was me, I would probably just stick with 23.04, upgrade to 23.10 and then subsequently 24.04 when they become available. What you do once you're on the 24.04 LTS release is up to you. By that time, other distros will probably also work out of the box too.

[-] marmarama@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

At least for me, there is a big difference between naming things at home and naming things for work.

Work "pet" machines get systematic names based on function, location, ownership and/or serial/asset numbers. There aren't very many of them these days. If they are "cattle" then they get random names, and their build is ephemeral. If they go wrong or need an upgrade, they get rebuilt and their replacement build gets a new random name. Whether they are pets or cattle, the hostnames are secondary to tags and other metadata, and in most cases the tags are used to identify the machines in the first instance, because tags are far more flexible and descriptive than a hostname.

At home, where the number of machines is limited, I know all of them like the back of my hand, and it's mostly just me touching them, whimsical names are where it's at.

[-] marmarama@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

I wouldn't say the Pixel line's hardware is rubbish, more that Google is focused on having a polished "it just works" experience rather than trying to differentiate themselves by having the fastest, biggest, newest hardware in the Android market.

The mobile market hit the "diminishing returns" point quite a while ago and for a lot of people - probably the majority - the only reasons to upgrade are security updates ending, or because a non-replaceable battery is getting to the end of its life.

I used to upgrade every 12-18 months religiously, but now my Pixel 5 is coming up on 3 years old and I'd happily keep it another few years with a battery replacement, if the updates weren't going to end shortly.

[-] marmarama@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

It is worse than uncompressed, but 990Kbps LDAC is the closest codec to totally transparent I've heard for Bluetooth audio. AptX HD is nearly as good to my ears, and is better than 660Kbps LDAC. The differences are very small though, especially when compared with the differences on the analog side, e.g. the amp, and particularly the headphone design.

Apple side-steps the problem by, at least when you're listening to Apple Music, simply sending the AAC stream as-is to the headphones and has them decode the audio. I don't know why that isn't a more common approach.

I'm still somewhat bemused that we're talking about Bluetooth codecs at all. It surely can't be that difficult technically to get 1.5Mbps actual throughput on Bluetooth and simply send raw 16-bit/44.1Khz PCM. 2.4Ghz WiFi is capable of hundreds of times that speed. Bluetooth has been stuck at the same speeds for decades.

[-] marmarama@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

The UI font in MacOS is called SF Pro. If you have access to a Mac you can simply copy the .otf font files over to Linux (they are in /System/Library/Fonts on MacOS) and install and use them there.

If you don't have access to a Mac, Google Roboto Sans is a very similar design (it was the default Android UI font for several years) and if it's not already installed by your Linux distro, it's freely downloadable.

[-] marmarama@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

I pulled them from the table at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_Russo-Ukrainian_War#Total_casualties which seems to be kept fairly up-to-date with the reasonably credible claims, including the Meduza estimates. Original references are in the Wikipedia article.

I added the 30000 upper bound as a fudge for the Ukrainian military deaths because the one somewhat credible estimate from the US that table lists only covers up to May 2023. While Ukraine has been on the offensive since then, I don't think increasing the KIA numbers by more than 50% in 2 months is credible even under the circumstances.

[-] marmarama@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Most Fediverse users are Western. The Western world has plenty of media diversity, and you can find virtually every viewpoint you can imagine represented there. Open criticism of government, all the way to the top, is a normal part of everyday life, and media outlets regularly criticise each other, and themselves, for bad takes and poor journalism.

Because of the diversity of media opinion, it is harder to push an agenda, so mainstream Western media does it, by and large, with substantial subtlety, building trust first, and seeding ideas over long periods of time.

Russian and Chinese media aimed at a Western audience seems brash and full of bad takes by comparison. It is rarely, if ever, critical of itself or of its own government, and also rarely provides any independently verifiable evidence for its claims. To a Western audience used to Western media, it appears so one-sided that it is laughable. That is why it is easy for people in the West to dismiss it as propaganda.

You could probably write a PhD thesis on why media outlets in China and Russia find it difficult to play the Western media game, but I think the main issue is this: If you live in a society that doesn't itself value diversity of opinion and thought, it is difficult to produce media for a society that does value that without it seeming off-kilter. It's a bit like the difference between being fluent in another language and "feeling" the language. To a native speaker listening to it, the difference is really obvious.

[-] marmarama@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Somewhere between 9000 and 42000 civilians depending on estimates, and probably 20000-30000 military, again depending on estimates.

[-] marmarama@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Converted-to-Bluetooth Stadia controller.

It's actually a really nice controller. The ergonomics are great for my big meaty hands, it's got some weight to it and feels really solidly built. The heft means the vibration really has some kick to it. The battery life is really good too - it was specced for having Wi-Fi on all the time, so now it's running only a little Bluetooth LE radio, the battery is massive. Even when it runs down, the charge rate is quick - full in about half an hour, and then good to go for weeks. Again, probably because it was specced for Wi-Fi, the radio circuitry is way above average and the range is stupid - I can control a Steam Deck from two rooms away, through two solid brick walls, something none of my other controllers can do.

The sticks are accurate and don't drift, the buttons are pretty good, and the D-Pad is a bit stiff but perfectly serviceable. My one significant complaint is that the springback on the triggers is way too light, which makes it difficult to be subtle with the triggers, a little annoying for driving games.

Still, if you see one at a sensible price, they're a steal.

[-] marmarama@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

Bit of a nitpick, but the comparison with the reversing of the MS Office formats is a bit tenuous, and somewhat revisionist.

Competitors and open-source applications were reverse-engineering the Office file formats long before Apple iWork was a thing, and arguably no-one really gets it right because in order to get it perfect you'd have to reproduce the Office application layouting engine exactly, bug-for-bug. Even Microsoft doesn't get it 100% from release to release.

[-] marmarama@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Agreed, don't do this. If your system is compromised, then the moment you unlock your Keepass database, even just once, the attacker now has both your passwords and your TOTP keys and can impersonate you anywhere.

Where I work we are phasing out TOTP in favour of FIDO2 keys, and the ability for users to store TOTP keys in a password database alongside their passwords is one of the key reasons.

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marmarama

joined 1 year ago