flynnguy

joined 2 years ago
[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 17 points 1 week ago

This is good, now if only the controllers were in stock for more than 30 minutes!

 

So I use the nemo file browser. I also started using Tailscale recently. I liked the idea of using Taildrop but I wanted a way to not have to use the command line every time. (I don't mind the command line but sometimes, especially for books, I use the file browser). So in ~/.local/share/nemo/actions/taildrop.nemo_action I added the following:

[Nemo Action]
Name=Send to iPad
Comment=Send file %F to iPad
Exec=sh -c "tailscale file cp %F ipad:"
Icon-Name=edit-copy
Selection=notnone
Extensions=nodirs
Separator=,
Dependencies=tailscale

Note, you'll want to change ipad to whatever device you want to send files to. But now, I can right click on a file and click Send to iPad and off it goes! You also might need to do sudo tailscale set --operator=$USER first to be able to run as your user. But if you can run tailscale file cp ... in your terminal (without sudo) it should work.

Of course, it doesn't have to be an iPad, that's just what I have. You can make one for any device you want to send files to.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 31 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

Because it's dumb, he didn't make an assassination joke, he made a joke about Trump being old and Melania being much younger, waiting for him to die because he's old and not in great health.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 2 points 2 weeks ago

The only thing windows has for it is compatibility with certain software. Fortunately this gets better and better all the time, being able to run windows software under Linux has been great. Steam with it's proton has done wonders for gaming under Linux.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 11 points 2 weeks ago

It's weird, I'm the same age as old people but I don't feel old... Except when I try and get up or down, I feel that 😕

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 3 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Does this mean RAM gets cheaper?

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 1 points 2 weeks ago

It is 100% separate. I have two heat pumps and no solar yet (mostly because the initial cost). I hope to do solar soon but heat pumps made a lot of sense even without the solar

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 1 points 2 weeks ago

I have two heat pumps and they will struggle when temps get too low, often not heating to what you might be used to. But I do love them and encourage more people to seriously look at them. I use them to supplement my propane heat which means I use less propane.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 2 points 3 weeks ago

I'm excited.... I probably wasn't going to get the steam cube even before the hike in prices for RAM but if this works with Linux and is reasonably priced, I'll probably get it. Hope it comes out soon.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 6 points 1 month ago

I have a kindle that I've had for ages. It has been jailbroken for a while and I've been loading my own epubs onto it. They make it easy with the 1 click send to kindle stuff but that locks you in to their ecosystem.

[–] flynnguy@programming.dev 3 points 1 month ago

I've gotten it to "work" but it's fragile and updates tend to break it. I ended up switching to FreeCAD, it's come a long way and version 1.1 is pretty great.

 

So I was in the market for a new computer. Previously I used a 2015 MacBook Pro and liked the Mac experience, I could run pretty much whatever software I wanted but I still had a terminal. However looking at the latest Mac's, everything is soldered, no way to upgrade anything. This was not something I wanted to support so I started looking at my options....

I don't love Windows but if I go from non-mac hardware, my options become Linux or Windows. I have a windows 11 desktop that I use mostly for gaming but for my daily driver, I didn't want a Windows machine. That left Linux.... what could I run?

I realize this isn't for everyone but I started looking at my options. The first piece of software I use that I was looking to replace was Capture One (Photography software). I started looking around and found darktable which so far seems to have all I need. It was a little adjustment from Capture One but not a lot. It runs on Windows/Mac/Linux so you can certainly try it out before you make the switch.

Then I use Alfred App as my quick launcher on my Mac. On Linux, I found Albert which seems to have what I'm looking for. I like that I can write plugins in Python but it's still pretty fast because it's mostly written in c++. It's not perfect but it'll do for now.

For 3d printing, most of the slicing software runs natively on Linux/Mac/Windows so that was an easy decision. The biggest downside was that I use Fusion 360 which does not have a Linux port. Jumping forward, I did try running it in Wine and it mostly works but not really 100% so right now I dual boot solely for this piece of software.

I already switched to Inkscape for vector graphics so that was easy since there is already a Linux version. I don't do a lot of word processing, spreadsheets and/or presentations but when I do, google docs has been good enough and there's LibreOffice if I really want to go local. Most other misc software I use is generally Open Source and runs on Linux as an option.

Since I already decided I would dual boot, I pulled the plug on a Framework 16. I really liked the modularity, the fact that it worked under Linux and really, everything about the company.

Installation was fairly straight forward once I sorted the Windows/Linux dual boot situation. You need to do it in the correct order or Windows complains. (I used 2x1TB NVMe drives) I went with OpenSuse tumbleweed mostly because debian is on the older side (great for servers, not great for desktops), ubuntu is dead to me after apt install firefox installs a snap and not a deb, fuck snaps. OpenSuse seemed like a good balance of latest but with mostly stability. I didn't want to go Arch or Gentoo because I just don't have time for that now.

So once everything is setup, I install Albert, Firefox, DarkTable, Inkscape, 3d Slicers, and Steam. In steam, I installed the handful of Linux native games but was a little disappointed in the number. Then I was talking with my son about Proton and decided to look into it a bit more. HOLY SHIT, IT'S JUST A FLAG IN STEAM!!!! Basically it's Settings->Properties->Compatability.... then toggle "Force the use of a specific Steam Play compatibility tool." Then I was just able to install Windows games under Linux. They run just like any other Steam game. There's a website that lists compatibility: https://www.protondb.com/ but so far everything I've tried to run works fine. So if you run Linux and Game at all, check this out.

So basically, now I've been using Linux as my daily driver (except for work) and the only thing I've had to boot into Windows for is Fusion 360.... Maybe I should really take a look at FreeCAD but for now, Fusion is too easy for me to reach for.

tl;dr: I think 2025 is the year of the Linux Desktop (well, Laptop, main driver) for me.

 

I'm making a box to store a pizza. The box itself is pretty straight forward, cherry wood, box joints and basically a groove in the bottom with a piece of plywood (cherry plywood) to act as the bottom. I'm pretty happy with how the bottom went together but for the top I'm having an issue....

So for the top I have a 3/8ths piece of roughly 10x10 with basically a dado around the edge so it insets slightly into the box. The problem I'm having is that when a pizza goes in, it bows a bit. I'm guessing it's the steam from the pizza but so far I've been able to put something heavy on it and it comes out but I want to prevent it in the future.

I'm thinking a couple strips on the underside (basically across to U that forms) might help (with some glue and a couple of screws). I've also "sealed" it with a food grade oil but I'm looking for thoughts if this will or won't help and any possible alternatives.

4
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by flynnguy@programming.dev to c/tengwar@lemmy.sdf.org
 

Not mine but I found it really useful...

 

So a friend of mine recommended Obsidian ages ago and I looked at it but thought I was happy using Joplin (another text-based note tool) which I still think is a great app. Took a brief look at it and thought it was just too complicated...

Then recently, I went down a youtube rabbit hole watching videos of how people use Obsidian... OMG 🤯

Now I have 2x Vaults, one for work and one personal. Dataview, templater, quickadd, periodic notes have just changed everything. Now I have documents for each person at work with their basic info and then when I make a meeting, I can just tag them which then updates a dataview table that shows what meetings I've been in with them.

Tasks allows me to just create a bunch of todos in random notes and then I can create a table to show all my undone tasks.

I mean, why did I wait so long? I've been using it for about 10 days now and it's been such a game changer. Sorry Joplin.

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