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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)V
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2 mo. ago

  • This is a direct quote from the article

  • This is such a real thing

  • windows just worked

    This is not how I remember windows

  • Facebook is a privately owned company that is responsible for their own actions.

  • "We use technology or a review team to identify content that should be covered," a notice obscuring the post reads. "This post doesn't go against our Community Standards, but may contain images that some people might find upsetting."

    Yeah, I bet.

    "What the f**k, Instagram?" a Bluesky user wrote.

    k.

  • Implied violence is violence.

    If I rob you at gun point that's violence even if I never shoot.

  • There are more empty homes than homeless in the US. I've seen literal tons of food and clothing go right to the dump to protect profit margins.

    Do you have any sources to back up the claim that we need to make more shit?

  • I just can't accept that employee owned grocery stores like WinCo are somehow keeping prices down but big grocery stores like Kroger are just skyrocketing.

    Prices on many items are literally 200% the cost of the same exact item at WinCo.

    They don't pay their employees more so where is that extra 100% profit going?

  • Yeah it's also like this is an entirely manufactured thing.

  • Kubernetes is not a programming language. It's a program written in a programming language called Go. Working with Kubernetes involves writing in a data serialisation language called YAML but YAML is not a programming language (IIRC) because it's not Turing complete.

    (I'm just a "code junky" btw)

  • Yeah I ran fedora for a while when I first got this since that's one of the official distros but it seems like it would really just be a function of the kernel itself and the laptop firmware.

    Going back to fedora does not enable deep sleep by default and I'm way too afraid to manually switch it again after having to pull the battery 5 times already in pursuit of a solution.

    I've been told this just doesn't/can't work.

    So basically unless someone can say "I experienced the same exact problem and here's how I fixed it" I'm just too afraid to try again haha.

    Framework advises not to pull the battery and they are not wrong in that advisement. It's sketchy as hell.

    When I enable deep sleep it prevents me from even accessing bios, so I can't do the firmware battery disconnect at that point.

  • AUR is super cool (when it's not getting DDOSed).

    Building packages from scratch isn't that hard usually but it can be and AUR really does simplify that.

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  • You caught me (btw).

    I've also ran fedora which is an officially support OS.

  • Using my framework laptop feels like a never ending struggle sometimes but I really like the idea of modular, repairable laptops so here I am.

    Edit: I have the FW13 12th gen intel

    • The screen has a very slow pixel response time, the ghosting is absolutely real
    • The screen is wobbly when I type (fixable with upgraded hinges)
    • The track pad is constantly dropping inputs
    • The screen resolution is generally awkward and fractional scaling is still hit or miss on Linux
    • Updating to the latest firmware (BIOS) required me to install WINDOWS (just for the update)
    • For some reason switching to Linux kernel deep sleep mode causes a total system failure that can only be recovered by physically removing the battery and CMOS.
    • Physically removing the battery is sketchy

    FWIW this is still my daily driver but I do sometimes consider seeing if anyone wants to trade for a ThinkPad haha

    Edit 2: If anyone has insight on the deep sleep issue I'm all eyes (biblically accurate angel mode).

  • Military contracts and genocide are two different things.

    Like sure military contracting causes a net harm to society but we can't fault people for drawing a line somewhere.