Yeah, but I only discovered it now.
Looking on github though, it looks like people combine builtins.map with this to wrap a bunch of packages at once though.
Yeah, but I only discovered it now.
Looking on github though, it looks like people combine builtins.map with this to wrap a bunch of packages at once though.
Cause it’s just translating to x and back to Wayland
You have a citation for this claim? I can't find anything that backs it up.
Why is waypipe not the answer?
No, because it has a "termination clause", where if Watcom is suing you you can't use the software anymore while you are
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sybase_Open_Watcom_Public_License
See the first bit, and the linked discussion by Debian developers.
I actually tried this right after I made this post, and it was not where near as smooth as I wanted. KDE would put the window that I had assigned to all desktops on top, whenever I would switch virtual desktops.
I found a solution though, it looks like mpv has support.
Yes, it's worth using. It's fairly easy to install, as it's almost always packaged, and that makes it easy to use.
But it's not really enough. For example, tools like Lynis usually miss containers.
A modern version of this stuff, I would probably recommend scanning all running containers with something like trivy, and then deploying wazuh on the machines. Wazuh can scan the system for misconfigurations in a similar manner to Lynis, but it is also capable of acting as a central logging server and a few other things.
I took a look through the twitter, which someone mentioned in another thread.
Given the 4chan like aestetic of your twitter post, I decided to take a look through the boards and it only took me less than a minute to find the n word being used.
Oh, and all the accounts are truly anonymous, rather than pseudoanonymous, which must make moderation a nightmare. Moderation being technically possible doesn't make it easy or practical to do.
I don't want an unmoderated experience by default, either.
No, I'm good. I think I'll stay far away from plebbit.
Oh, so this actually is a user. Are these just rss feeds you follow or something? How do you find the content to post in this community?
To be pedantic, lemmy is federated, rather than decentralized (e.g. a direct p2p architecture).
With decentralization, moderation is much harder than federation, so many people aren't a fan.
I'm not spotting it. "AI" is only mentioned once.
The key and secret in the docker compose don't seem to be API keys, but keys for directus itself (which upon a careful reread of the article, I realize is not FOSS, which might be anpther reason people don't like it").
Directus does seem to have some integration with openai, but it requires at least an api key and this blog post doesn't mention any of that.
The current setup they are using doesn't seem to actually connect to openai at all.
Try https://lnav.org/