[-] nycki@lemmy.world 27 points 1 month ago

you ungrateful fuck.

[-] nycki@lemmy.world 25 points 2 months ago

Why is this in c/Technology?

[-] nycki@lemmy.world 29 points 2 months ago

Its kinda hard to ignore the healthcare problem. That always stank of corruption.

37
submitted 2 months ago by nycki@lemmy.world to c/technology@lemmy.world

I'm currently trying to set up a homebrew cassette tape storage format, but trying to use existing tech where possible. I was excited to see that minimodem already exists for converting an audio stream to a byte stream, and is even available in termux for android, so I could decode cassettes with my phone! However, I'd like some sort of higher-level tool to encode and decode "packets" or "slices" so that I can add error correction. I'm sure this sort of thing must exist for amature radio purposes.

I could write a script that cuts a file into slices, with checksums and redundancy for each slice, and then pads them with null bytes so I can isolate each frame when decoding. What I want is to find out if that's already been done. I've heard of AX.25 packets but I can't find a tool that does that with stdio.

[-] nycki@lemmy.world 29 points 3 months ago

Cracking DRM. Win-win.

[-] nycki@lemmy.world 34 points 5 months ago

It's a digital image of a painting!

(Six, if you fold the pages back.)

[-] nycki@lemmy.world 37 points 6 months ago

I know what the headline actually means but i'm choosing to believe that donny just found out about calendars.

[-] nycki@lemmy.world 42 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

Starting anything from scratch is a huge risk these days. At best you'll have something like the python 2 -> 3 ~~rewrite~~ overhaul (leaving scraps of legacy code all over the place), at worst you'll have something like gnome/kde (where the community schisms rather than adopting a new standard). I would say that most of the time, there are only two ways to get a new standard to reach mass adoption.

  1. Retrofit everything. Extend old APIs where possible. Build your new layer on top of https, or javascript, or ascii, or something else that already has widespread adoption. Make a clear upgrade path for old users, but maintain compatibility for as long as possible.

  2. Buy 99% of the market and declare yourself king (cough cough chromium).

[-] nycki@lemmy.world 145 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

Firefox had tab grouping first. Before Chrome. And then it broke support for it when they did the add-ons overhaul. I'm surprised bringing it back wasn't a high priority...

129
submitted 7 months ago by nycki@lemmy.world to c/asklemmy@lemmy.ml

This article says that NASA uses 15 digits after the decimal point, which I'm counting as 16 in total, since that's how we count significant digits in scientific notation. If you round pi to 3, that's one significant digit, and if you round it to 1, that's zero digits.

I know that 22/7 is an extremely good approximation for pi, since it's written with 3 digits, but is accurate to almost 4 digits. Another good one is √10, which is accurate to a little over 2 digits.

I've heard that 'field engineers' used to use these approximations to save time when doing math by hand. But what field, exactly? Can anyone give examples of fields that use fewer than 16 digits? In the spirit of something like xkcd: Purity, could you rank different sciences by how many digits of pi they require?

33
submitted 9 months ago by nycki@lemmy.world to c/gaming@lemmy.ml

Following this tutorial, I tried gyro aiming on my Dualsense controller, which has analog triggers and gyroscopic motion controls. I set gyro to act as mouse, activated by a right trigger soft pull. If you use Steam with a controller I highly recommend this; it gives you almost as much control as a mouse and keyboard! Along with a few other custom rebinds, this gives me a console-ish experience on Minecraft Java :)

[-] nycki@lemmy.world 23 points 9 months ago

This isn't a new problem, Reddit was the same way. As a site grows, it gets harder to moderate, and that means more people trolling for attention. Go to your user settings and change the default view from "All" to "Subscribed", and you'll have more control over your home page.

[-] nycki@lemmy.world 36 points 9 months ago

Advertisements.

12
submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by nycki@lemmy.world to c/steamdeck@sopuli.xyz

It's been long enough that I'm sure someone besides me has shelled out the $200 for a DS5+, since it's a bluetooth controller with a touchpad and grip paddle buttons. Is it worth it?

Edit: To clarify, I own a Dualsense, but I'm lusting after the Dualsense Edge revision.

[-] nycki@lemmy.world 83 points 10 months ago

Anyone else think a lot of conservatives feel this way?

42
submitted 10 months ago by nycki@lemmy.world to c/steamdeck@sopuli.xyz

I have a steam deck dock in the living room, with a dualsense and some joy-cons paired to it. Are there any games similar to Ring Fit that work well on PC/Steam? Do I need a new controller or can I use these?

[-] nycki@lemmy.world 46 points 11 months ago

I remember in college we took a course on economic efficiency and the short takeaway is "the free market is extremely efficient, but only when the competing parties start with equal resources. the more inequal the starting position, the less efficient the market becomes." and to my mind that suggests that we should enforce some sort of "rubber-banding" effect so that a company needs to keep competing or else it will "drift" back to the mean over time. Something like aggressive taxes on the uber-rich and comprehensive welfare for the poor, y'know? Capitalism but with safety guards would be pretty cool.

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nycki

joined 1 year ago