Voroxpete
@Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
- Comment on Marathon | Launch Gameplay Trailer 2 days ago:
This has the makings of another Concord written all over it. Even after the disaster with the stolen art, the reports I’ve heard are that the gameplay just isn’t good. Whatever talent was at Bungie left some time ago by the sounds of things.
- Comment on Discord Users Threaten Exodus Over Age Verification Face Scan Controversy 4 days ago:
Revolt is now stoat.chat. And I think they might be getting a little slammed with new users.
As someone who made an account a while ago, no issues so far.
- Comment on 'What a great way to kill your community': Discord users are furious about its new age verification checks — and are now hunting for alternatives 4 days ago:
Revolt is now called Stoat Chat. Some sort of legal issue apparently.
Anyway, for those who don’t know, it’s basically an open source clone of Discord. Definitely worth a look, probably where I’ll my stuff now.
- Comment on New Fable game removes feature core to franchise's DNA 5 days ago:
Imagine if any other kind of media did the same thing. Like, you’re reading a book, and every few pages there’s a footnote telling you what the protagonist’s current Paragon/Renegade score is based on the decisions they recently made. Would be a miserable experience.
God, I love KOTOR so much, but its consequences have been a fucking disaster for the entire RPG industry.
- Comment on British soldiers to get new AI radios, headsets and tablets 5 days ago:
Sure, and they’re talking about that like something they might add to it down the line, because at the end of the day these systems are usually just android apps, so you can theoretically add anything.
In practice, what’ll most likely happen is that they’ll try that capability out, decide that it sucks, and quietly ditch it. Or, they’ll roll it out anyway in order to keep the government happy, and then commanders will just tell their troops not to use it. Militaries have always known how to work with and around bad equipment.
If they have to shove in a dumb AI app to get the funding for some actually very useful military equipment approved, well, that’s military procurement for you. Would be nice if the current UK government weren’t so hell bent on shoving AI in everything, but the realistic alternatives currently are “Nazis” and “Sparkling fascists.”
- Comment on British soldiers to get new AI radios, headsets and tablets 5 days ago:
Smaller armies benefit more from tools like this. Not the AI part - see my other comment for why I think that’s not even real - but the ability to quickly and effectively communicate orders and information. A soldier being able to point a webcam on their helmet at the enemy position so that HQ can instantly see their disposition and entrenchment is super helpful. The ability to draw orders on terrain maps in real time is super helpful. Most of war is communication and intelligence gathering. Part of the reason the French army collapsed in 1940 is that they were using signal flags while the Germans were using radios. That stuff matters.
And for smaller militaries this matters more, because you can’t simply drop the hammer on every threat you meet. You have to judiciously and precisely consider when to engage and when to fall back. You maneuver your enemy into situations where you have the upper hand. You defeat in detail. You plan every engagement to minimize your casualties and maximize theirs.
- Comment on British soldiers to get new AI radios, headsets and tablets 5 days ago:
Yeah, we’re currently having discussions at my company about how we’re going to respond if potential clients starting asking about AI or putting it in their RFPs.
And this isn’t a new problem. We make a product that can be hosted in a cloud server if you want to. Because of the nature of the product, this is the stupidest idea imaginable. We straight up tell people not to do it. This is something that absolutely needs to be on-prem. But we made it able to run remote, because sometimes buyers will put out an RFP that says “System must be cloud native.”
That line gets put there by a CTO who can barely open their email, but keeps seeing the word “Cloud” in Business Insider and WSJ, and thinks it must be the future because that’s where their photos get backed up to. No one in their right mind wants it, but we have to offer it or else someone else gets the sale.
- Comment on New Fable game removes feature core to franchise's DNA 5 days ago:
I think what you’re getting at here might be better expressed as “Moral choices are more interesting than morality systems.”
Life Is Strange doesn’t have a morality system of any kind, but it has, easily, some of the most interesting moral choices I’ve ever experienced in a video game. One of them doesn’t even affect the ending or later story beats (to my knowledge), and yet I literally had to put the controller down and walk away because I couldn’t make that choice… Both options were so unspeakably horrible, and yet the choice was obviously and urgently necessary.
Mass Effect actually has some really interesting moral quandaries, but they’re massively undercut by the need to force them into the game’s binary moral code, instead of just allowing them to be the complex problems that they are. Morality systems boil every choice down to an arbitrary position on an arbitrary axis.
The Witcher works because it simply presents you with situations and allows you to judge them for yourself. It doesn’t present you with a score card afterwards.
- Comment on What's your opinion on Ubiquiti/Unifi gear? 6 days ago:
Only when you have to write out to swap. In the case of something like ZFS, it stores data in RAM, looks for it there, then looks on the disk. So freeing up the RAM is instantaneous; you just mark the space as free, then the other process writes into it.
- Comment on British soldiers to get new AI radios, headsets and tablets 6 days ago:
So, as far as I can see, this is basically just the same networked soldier tech that every modern military is using. Canada has had this stuff in the field for a while (mostly with 3RCR, and I think 3PPCLI), with plans to expand to the entire reg force once we work the kinks out. It’s pretty much just a way of giving soldiers a map screen where commanders can draw orders, and also giving them a camera so they can directly feed back visual intel. Helps cut back fog of war.
In the article itself the only hint of AI is the note that these devices will be “AI capable” which is kind of a no shit Sherlock. Literally these systems already use off the shelf smart devices connected up to a hardened comms system. The Canadian one is built on Samsung S22s. Of course its “AI capable”, anything with a CPU is.
My suspicion is that the UK military just really wanted this networked soldier capability (its a good program, that’s why everyone is doing it), and knew that they could get the funding more easily if they snuck the word AI in there because the current UK government has an absolute raging hard on for anything remotely AI related.
- Comment on What's your opinion on Ubiquiti/Unifi gear? 6 days ago:
It’s part of ZFS 2.3.0, so it just depends what version TrueNAS is shipping with.
- Comment on What's your opinion on Ubiquiti/Unifi gear? 6 days ago:
ZFS seems pretty RAM hungry
This is a common misunderstanding.
Short version; ZFS isn’t RAM hungry, it’s RAM aware. If your system has unused memory lying around, ZFS will use it to improve read performance. But it will give up that memory the moment anything else needs it. Like many other Linux processes, it’s just making the best use of the resources that are available.
and I don’t believe you can add new drives to an existing volume.
- Comment on US gave Ukraine and Russia a June deadline to reach agreement to end war, Zelenskyy says 6 days ago:
This is 100% Trump. He thinks this is a big foreign policy win that he can carry into the mid-terms.
Of course, ending the war means convincing Russia to back down from the fight that they started, and the US no ability to do that because Trump still keeps trying to treat Russia like a friend. So any pressure they put on them will be meaningless. Meanwhile any pressure they put on Ukraine will basically amount to “End the war on Russia’s terms, or fight it without our help”, which is just a choice between two equally terrible options.
- Comment on SSH Client for Linux Desktop and Android - Alternative to Termius 1 week ago:
Xpipe is fantastic. I have to manage a LOT of SSH connections between work and homelab (well over 200 now) and Xpipe has been a god send.
- Comment on Spotify changes developer mode API to require premium accounts, limits test users 1 week ago:
Yeah, I tend to buy vinyl for the artists that I’m really into.
- Comment on Spotify changes developer mode API to require premium accounts, limits test users 1 week ago:
Depends what you define as “Wouldn’t work for me.” Song library has improved a lot, if that’s what you mean.
- Comment on Spotify changes developer mode API to require premium accounts, limits test users 1 week ago:
tidal.com
Lacks a few of Spotify’s features, but the audio quality is great, and it’s cheaper. Plus, fuck Spotify.
Qobuz is also good, apparently.
- Comment on The Linux kernel is just a program 1 week ago:
OK, yeah, that’s actually really helpful. Anyone who plays around with Linux at all, give this a read. Good stuff.
- Comment on what is good remote desktop software? 1 week ago:
At work we use Meshcentral. It requires you to host your own server, but it’s very powerful, and very reliable. We’re managing something like 400 remote systems with it currently. We also use Netbird as a secondary access layer (I prefer it to Tailscale for the simplicity of setting up ACLs, and the really easy deployment).
For most home server usage though, I wouldn’t bother with Meshcentral. It’s a lot of overhead if you’re only managing a couple of systems. If you really need remote desktop (why do your servers even have desktops?) use RustDesk instead.
- Comment on what is good remote desktop software? 1 week ago:
RustDesk really is fantastic. No shade to any of the other solutions suggested in this thread, but 99% of the time when someone needs take desktop access, RustDesk is exactly what they need.
- Comment on Pornhub, YouPorn, and Redtube and other content sharing platforms will block New users in the UK starting next week(February 2) 2 weeks ago:
I guarantee there will still be VPNs accessible in the UK no matter what they try. My money is definitely on Mullvad still being accessible for one.
- Comment on Does university email give you any free server? 2 weeks ago:
On their ARM server you get something like 8 cores and 24GB of RAM. Honestly, that’ll run a hell of a lot more than an RSS server.
I have one that’s running three different minecraft servers simultaneously.
- Comment on New Fable game removes feature core to franchise's DNA 3 weeks ago:
Yeah, I fucking detest the way morality systems in games work.
I don’t think they’re a fundamentally unworkable idea, but very few games have even come close to doing anything good with the concept.
Most just offer you two equal but different benefits, let you pick between them, and call that morality. See Bioshock. And the Mass Effect / KOTOR system always sucked because it punished you for going down the middle (ie, playing a complex character).
One of the only good morality systems I’ve ever seen is Metro 2033. For those who don’t know, the game has a secret personality tracker. It gives you points for taking actions that are pro-social. You get a lot of opportunities in the game to refuse benefits or give up resources to help others. You are never directly rewarded for this. It doesn’t do the bullshit where you give someone some food and they go “Here’s an old gun I had lying around.” Being kind costs you. It also measures the time you spend interacting with people, listening in on conversations, that kind of thing. By the end of the game, if you’ve played your character like someone who cares about other people, you get an opportunity to make a better choice, that leads to a better outcome. If you don’t, the choice is never presented to you at all, because the character you portrayed wouldn’t even think there was a choice to be made in that situation. It’s brilliant, and it completely solves the usual Deus Ex / Mass Effect “Three buttons” ending where nothing leading up to it matters. To be able to make the good ending choice you have to have played the kind of character who would be willing to make that choice.
- Comment on New Fable game removes feature core to franchise's DNA 3 weeks ago:
“looks so bland to me”
So… It’s a Fable game then?
Seriously, when has this series ever been anything other than the unseasoned oatmeal of RPGs?
- Comment on AI boom could falter without wider adoption, Microsoft chief Satya Nadella warns 3 weeks ago:
“This totally amazing new product that everyone will definitely want might turn into a total failure if everyone doesn’t actually want it. Clearly, this is your fault for not wanting it hard enough, and not our fault for shoving a totally unwanted product down everyone’s throats.”
- Comment on Nova Launcher gets a new owner and... ads 3 weeks ago:
I just switched to Lawnchair recently, and I really like it. I’ll definitely give Dragon a look.
- Comment on Help with understanding memory usage discrepancy 3 weeks ago:
You can also set these limits in your compose file, if you use compose (which you should).
- Comment on Help with understanding memory usage discrepancy 3 weeks ago:
Most of those containers are probably grabbing more memory than they actually need. Consider applying some resource constraints to some of them.
Dozzle is an excellent addition to your docker setup, giving you live performance graphs for all your containers. It can help a lot with fine tuning your setup.
- Comment on Canada weighs sending soldiers to Greenland as show of NATO solidarity with Denmark 3 weeks ago:
My wife is in the CAF. Her exact words were “I’ll go. Sign me the fuck up.”
- Comment on Meta has discontinued its metaverse for work, too 4 weeks ago:
But what about the zero people who used it? Whatever will they do?