crusa187

joined 1 year ago
[–] crusa187@lemmy.ml 2 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

The strategy was to wield identity politics as a weapon by making these false claims, eg, “It’s her turn”

[–] crusa187@lemmy.ml 8 points 4 days ago

Yay for their glorious, free trusted ssl certs. Love this project!

[–] crusa187@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Been coding Java for about 15 years now. Pretty much agree - anon’s primary mistake was using javaFX. From a junior dev perspective I can see why they’d do that, but Java isn’t really meant for building desktop applications, it’s meant to power web apps.

What they should have done instead is create a backend restful web service and wire up a frontend rest client with something suited to web app ui dev such as angular or react. Java has some awesome frameworks built for it over the years, something like spring boot would make building that backend service trivial if you know how to use it. JAX-RS/Jersey or even servlets could be utilized for this instead, if you wanted to.

Spring boot has some nice tooling for thread management, but Java also has pretty good options for this built in as well. As chunky mentioned, if you aren’t already versed in concurrency patterns, don’t try to perform concurrent operations or you’re gonna have a bad time. But do learn how to do this, because exploiting concurrency is one of the golden rules of good computing.

[–] crusa187@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago

Replaced on old windows install on living room media pc with popOS. Newer hardware, just didn’t make sense to run such a vulnerable and outdated os any more and I wasn’t about to pay for a new windows version for it. A few choice apps linked in the dock, and the main streaming websites bookmarked on homepage in the browser, and we are golden. No issues making the switch really, apart from occasional Bluetooth hiccups with the combo wireless keyboard/trackpad that drives everything. To be fair, Bluetooth occasionally has a meltdown on windows or Mac as well, so I don’t think this detracts from a successful conversion. The end result is actually much more stable and approachable for the whole fam, so quite happy with results.

[–] crusa187@lemmy.ml 8 points 1 month ago

I mean…it’s still the best ffdshow wrapper imho

[–] crusa187@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 month ago

Afaik this is precisely what the captcha data was intended for - training AI models. Originally leveraged machine learning. LLMs are a slightly different paradigm but same purpose and results here.

[–] crusa187@lemmy.ml -4 points 2 months ago

JFC, win_blows_.

[–] crusa187@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago

lol!

lmao even.

[–] crusa187@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 months ago

First of all, I just want to acknowledge how humorous the point you’re making is given your name, Zek.

Second, I hear you. What I’m saying is that in the states we have seen a disturbing lack of interest in trust busting over the past 20-30 years, and it’s led to some ridiculous monopolization in some markets. Tech is definitely one area that suffers from this. You’re right that EU regulators could push back on this if they wanted to, but think about what that might mean if nvidia/intel decided to play hardball. We are presently in a golden age of AI where nvidia’s products are basically the mainstay of the entire market…it could really set the EU back competitively if they chose to refuse those products at this particular juncture. I think they would face enormous pressure to simply accept the deal, in this hypothetical.

[–] crusa187@lemmy.ml 9 points 3 months ago (7 children)

Don’t be so sure about that.

[–] crusa187@lemmy.ml 35 points 3 months ago (1 children)

“My niece asked nicely: ‘If you’re calling the police, are they going to kill my mum?’” one of the women told the newspaper. “And he laughed at that stage. He looks directly in her face and he said: ‘Yeah, maybe we’ll find out.’”

My man’s finally flexing the full power vested in him as cinema popcorn popper, and it is glorious!!

view more: next ›