

That’s awesome. Welcome on Lemmy!
That’s awesome. Welcome on Lemmy!
Right?! It’s the same for me!
Apparently my way of consuming YT is very different from most people. I do rely on subscriptions feed, but I have never used notifications. The feed still works perfectly - for me at least.
Just out of curiosity. Why do you need notifications? Do you try to watch the videos as soon they are posted?
That’s good. You can also check out btrbk - it’s a tool which can take snapshots for you, like Timeshift, but also back them up to somewhere.
Absolutely, my backup solution is actually based on BTRFS snapshots. I use btrbk (already mentioned in another reply) to take the snapshots and copy them to another drive. Then a nightly restic job backs up the latest snapshot to B2.
Just a friendly reminder that BTRFS snapshots are not backups.
Yeah, I intentionally left out the word “groundbreaking” from the title when posting, because that’s a ridiculous thing to say about this research. Obviously, it could be much better.
But I would say that any attempt at rational look at LLMs in mainstream media is a step in the right direction.
Well, yeah, I could’ve told you that too but neither of us would have any proof. It’s one thing to try it out and decide that it sucks for your use case and another thing to measure and quantify it somehow.
Why such a negative reaction if you apparently agree with the outcome?
I’m not surprised by those results at all but I think it’s a very good thing to see some actual research and numbers.
Declarative configuration fixes this problem. You don’t really have to write down how to setup something because the configuration is the description.
I use NixOS so in my case all the stuff you described would be defined in a Nix code in a separate Calibre module. I can enable and disable such module at will with a single option in my main config file.
I really recommend looking into immutable, declarative systems. I think NixOS is the most complete solution but there are some other too. I have no experience with them though.
Well, I actually enjoy code review, and I enjoy it on both ends. I learned A LOT thanks to insightful review by my teammates. And I like to pass that knowledge on to juniors when reviewing their code.
I want a good tiling DE solution so much. I really hope COSMIC will fill in that gap.
I recommend checking out satty as well.
I really liked it but unfortunately I was not able to get it to work on Wayland (with Hyprland) at all.
I recently migrated to their hosted plan and can highly recommend. It’s as close as you can get to Google Photos with E2EE right now.
Agreed. I tried pretty much every other alternative because Joplin’s UI seems a bit dated and I’m a sucker for eye candy. But in the end I came back to Joplin. It’s really good and the UI actually grows on me too. Not modern and flashy but also not ugly and it works well in practice.