Uli

joined 2 years ago
[–] Uli@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 days ago

Same here. I've been building a bootstrap script, and each time I test it, it tears down the whole cluster and starts from scratch, pulling all of the images again. Every time I hit the Docker pull limit after 10 - 12 hours of work, I treat that as my "that's enough work for today" signal. I'm going to need to set up a caching system ASAP or the hours I work on this project are about to suddenly get a lot shorter.

[–] Uli@sopuli.xyz 1 points 4 days ago
[–] Uli@sopuli.xyz 3 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Track 16, Black Winter Day, is one of my favorite rap songs. It tells a story, it's sad, but also subtly uplifting, and has a pretty catchy hook.

[–] Uli@sopuli.xyz 2 points 4 days ago

Personally, I downvoted because lately I've been devoting almost all of my energy toward trying to develop software we can use to build a true democracy. That's how I keep myself sane and believe I'm contributing to solutions. Others have their own ways.

And while I'm waiting for scripts to run, I do make the occasional political comment in places like this. But that's a separate thing just to connect with people and unwind. I can't speak for the others, but I was downvoting the assumption that just because someone shows outrage at an outrageous situation, that necessarily means they're doing nothing to try to fix it. Those things are not mutually exclusive.

[–] Uli@sopuli.xyz 7 points 5 days ago

Yeah, I thought he was out of control, but I wasn't aware he had been slammed.

[–] Uli@sopuli.xyz 3 points 6 days ago

Yeah, there is a lot to miss about those days. Seems naive looking back to not have known that those early-net vibes could not last.

I subscribed to a writing magazine in the late 90s or so and they had a web forum. It was amazing to be able to post my writing online and get feedback from a community of people who were virtually always friendly (if sometimes blunt) and dedicated to the craft. I miss that genuine feeling of community, seeing the same pool of people around you so often that you notice when someone's been gone a while.

It can't be the same now for a lot of reasons, but I agree that Lemmy and its Fediverse counterparts (I've only been on Lemmy) are the closest thing we have now. And having recently looked in on the alternative, I just notice reddit getting worse and worse and Lemmy getting better and better.

We should enjoy this time when this world is small. And welcome the refugees as they arrive. Would love for the people to own the means of production, but at this point I will be thrilled if the people can at least come together and seize control of the means of meme production.

[–] Uli@sopuli.xyz 4 points 6 days ago (1 children)

I am maybe misplaced in this conversation. I was born in 1990. I do feel a deep nostalgia for early chat rooms and IRC. So much so that I'm trying to build up a chat platform of my own.

In comparison to the time of asking people their A/S/L and just hanging out talking about how our lives are different, there are now maybe four (or five?) categories of potentially society-ending threats hanging around our cultural zeitgeist. All of them addressable, but it just hangs around every internet thread like a miasma now.

But I do think we'll find ourselves nostalgic for this time in a similar way that we look back on the 80's. In the same way it became possible in the mid 70's to just buy some off-the-shelf components and assemble them into personal computers that can be sold en masse, it is every year more and more possible for a relative novice (such as myself) to do something like create their own chat room app. With some prior experience and the help of AI, I've got the bare bones of a shift-left style DevSecOps stack, and it feels really exciting. It feels like I'm a guy in the 70's in his garage putting a prototype personal computer together, the way you can abstract your requirements from deployed resources in CI/CD. I envision a near future where corporate capitalistic social media becomes stale and increasingly awful (status quo) and the average consumer can have an idea for an app and have a fully hardened back end system to support it in the span of an afternoon. I'm looking forward to a new crop of communication technologies that we collectively develop as a people to tackle the overarching issues which affect us all. Imagine if we could all organize to efficiently locate ideal candidates for public office and democratically work out our differences in environments where peaceful debate and separate chill zones are both encouraged, rather than profit-driven systems where outrage is king. We can do so much better, and we are just now on the cusp of having all the tools to enable the average person to finally be able to help themselves.

I'm sorry for the tangent, and for polluting this thread with all of this. I know it's not really on topic, I'm just waiting for tests to process and really pumped up about starting a revolution later, idk, maybe, I mean, like only if you feel like revolting.

[–] Uli@sopuli.xyz 2 points 6 days ago

I agree. I clicked into this one because it looked so different. I thought the first one of these posts was interesting but seeing the same style so many times started to feel excessive. But now I think I was wrong. Something new has emerged from the sameness. Good work, OP.

[–] Uli@sopuli.xyz 12 points 1 week ago

Yeah, somehow it looked AI before I clicked into it for the high res version, something about the way the guy's face was drawn. And when I saw the high res, it was really obvious, because the pupils are askew in a way a true artist would not have chosen. And as you say, the stippling pattern is typical of AI. Weird that our brains seem to be some of the best competitors in the arms race between creating and identifying AI images.

[–] Uli@sopuli.xyz 6 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Ah, the whole cast is here. Looking good as new, but they're all seasoned veterans. How ironic.

[–] Uli@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 week ago

And of course, the references in the top right of the canvas would be replaced with a copy of the original.

[–] Uli@sopuli.xyz 14 points 1 week ago (2 children)
11
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by Uli@sopuli.xyz to c/lemmyconnect@lemmy.ca
 

A few times lately someone has replied to me and I click on their comment in my inbox to reply back. It takes me to the thread, but only shows a parent or sibling comment, not the reply that was in the inbox. But if I go back to the inbox and click on their profile, I see the comment in their history.

Most recently, this happened to a comment from Azzy@beehaw.org. They sent me a reply telling me about a containers plugin in Firefox and I just want to reply back thanking them for the tip.

Is this a real bug, or is it an artifact of how some instances are not federated with others?

Android 10 Galaxy S9

Edit: Link doesn't seem to lead to their account. Am I linking it wrong?

 
 

Basically anything I copy won't paste into the app. The exception is when I copy a link from an app like YouTube and paste it directly into Connect. But if I paste the same link into a notes app and copy the url from there, nothing happens when I try to paste in Connect.

I'm on a Galaxy S9, Android version 10.

 

🦁🐯🇰🇪

 

magicaltrevor:

Everyone loves Magical Trevor 🧙‍♂️

Cuz the tricks that he does are ever so clever

Look at him now

Disappearing a cow 🐄

(Where is the cow?) 🤷‍♂️🐄

(Hidden right now) ❓🐄❓

Taking a bow, it's Magical Trevor 🧙‍♂️

Everybody's seen that the trick is clever

Look at him there

With his leathery,

leathery

whip

It's made of magic

And with a little flick—

Yeah, yeah, yeah, the cow is back 🐄😲

Yeah

Yeah

Yeah

The cow is back

Back, back

Back from his magical journey

What did he see? 🤔

🌌 In the parallel dimension 🌌

He saw beans

Lots of beans 🍛

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Oh

Beans 🍛

🍛 Lots of beans🍛

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🍛 Lots 🍛 of 🍛 beans 🍛

Yeah, yeah...

goto magicaltrevor;

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