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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: August 6th, 2023

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  • I think that both putting your pet down and not doing so must be an honest consideration.

    As their caretaker, you can empathize with them the most. Imagine what you would want in their situation, and do it. You have the ability to cognize this - they do not.

    There are humane services that will come to your home so they don’t even have to leave a familiar environment. But sometimes, your buddy still has joy in life, even though he’s all wobbly.

    …in the end, the truth is that it’s a judgment call, and you do the best you can - and make your choices in a way that, if they were there in your head with you, and could understand your choices, they would love you for it, and that you can love yourself for.





  • The basic question is: Where does the motivation of your reaction (or action) come from?

    If you have an emotional goal to prevent the thing from having existed, you are doomed from the start.

    If you have accepted fully that it is the way it is, and that what you need to do is add a valid response to the situation, rather than preventing the existence of the situation, you’re probably on the right track.

    That is, you can’t block a punch, or respond in kind, if you haven’t accepted that you’re in a fight. Instead, you’ll just have your ass handed to you.

    When people say “how could this happen?!” they aren’t usually asking questions at all, even if it’s a situation they would benefit well from asking questions in. They usually mean “this shouldn’t have happened.” …and, they are wrong.

    It’s not that it should happen, or shouldn’t happen. Those are irrelevant. It’s that it’s happening (or happened), and the probability of naturally generating a valid response increases massively once you accept that.

    Once you accept the situation fully, you’ll be able to look at it clearly, and have a greater chance of recognizing it, and recognizing it before others even realize that it’s happening - or, before others realize they are telegraphing their actions before they strike. As such, you have a better capacity to respond appropriately.

    The largest problem humans have, in my opinion, is fighting ghosts and impossible battles - which leaves them open to being taken advantage of or repeating painful cycles. Radical acceptance addresses some of that, if treated as a means to think clearly, rather than as a religion to adhere to.



  • I like nushell, but I love xonsh. Xonsh is the bastard love child of Python and Bash.

    it can be thought of as:

    • try this statement in Python
    • if there’s an exception, try it in bash.

    Now, that’s not a very accurate description, because the reality is more nuanced, but it allows for things like:

    for file in !(find | grep -i '[.]mp3^'):
        file = Path(file.strip())
        if file != Path('.') and file != file.with_suffix('.mp3'):
        mv @(file) @(file.with_suffix('.mp3'))
    

    Now, there are things in there I wouldn’t bother with normally - like, rather than using mv, I’d just use file.rename(), but the snippet shows a couple of the tools for interaction between xonsh and sh.

    • !(foo) - if writing python, execute foo, and return lines
    • @(foo) - if writing sh, substitute with the value of the foo variable.

    But, either a line is treated in a pyhony way, or in a shelly way - and if a line is shelly, you can reference Python variables or expressions via @(), and if it’s Pythony, you can execute shell code with !() or $(), returning the lines or the exact value, respectively.

    Granted, I love python and like shell well enough, and chimeras are my jam, so go figure.


  • You can do Linux if your situation meets these criteria:

    • your hardware is supported. it likely is, but check. Usually running a live usb is sufficient.
    • The proprietary software you want to run is supported in some stable way - like, platinum steam support, or the developer supports and intends to continue supporting Linux. do dual boot temporarily and make absolutely sure.
    • you are psychologically capable of declining to try to fix everything. While Linux just works for me, I’ve learned to recognize escalating effort in getting some new cool piece of software or hardware to work. wait until what you want is at least in beta. aside from that, it’s just not supported. Don’t frozzle the frimfram as /u/linuxminordeity told you to, because after that, you’ll have to bidnap the uperpon. …and on and on. just accept that people are working on it and it’s not ready. contribute somehow, if you feel like it. but accept. If it can’t be installed through typical channels (website package for linux, the repositories, or flatpak) it just doesn’t work.

    tbh, it sounds like you don’t want to have to think about and test it. …and if that’s true, then you shouldn’t be switching operating systems if you can reasonably avoid it.





  • bastion@feddit.nltoAsklemmy@lemmy.mlWhy would'nt this work?
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    10 months ago

    it wouldn’t work, because there is no unbreakable, unfoldable stick. the stick will have flex, and the force transmitted will occur much more slowly through the molecular chain of the stick than light’s travel time.

    reality is much more woobly and spongy than you know.



  • not familiar with the specific app you’re using. am I reading that right, that you’re throttling on power, current and temp?

    if so, there’s not much you can do. but if it’s just temp throttling, you can get better fans/cooling.

    if you’re already satisfied with fans/cooling, then yes, you’re pretty much using it to it’s max.

    to be clear: throttling on power and current means you’re getting as much as you can out of the hardware you have (without over clocking or similar). although, make sure your CPU governor is ‘performance’.

    throttling on temperature alone means you’re not getting the most out of you’re hardware that is technically possible, it means you’re hitting the thermal TDP of the system. for some systems (laptops, generally), there’s not much you can do there. but for others, you can tinker with cooling.






  • Yes. It’s a scalable hobby, and can run from virtually no cost to why-are-you-burning-money. But you can do a lot in gaming with little monetary investment.

    There are lots of budget indie games that are lots of fun, and if you find out you like gaming and want to try more fancy titles, you can always upgrade hardware.

    Minimal entry: your current pc. Install steam, and buy/try what you like, returning it if it’s too slow/doesn’t work.

    Light entry: get familiar with your pc’s ram size, hd/ssd size, cpu speed/type, and graphics card. Use that to ensure your pc can handle the game by looking at the game’s minimum requirements.

    Medium-heavy entry: Upgrade things.

    • ssd if you don’t have one. The difference between that and spinning disks is night and day. If you wished things loaded faster, get this.
    • 8 gb graphics card in the $150 range, amd or nvidia-based. Get this if you want a smoother experience / if you can notice individual frames happening. You don’t need the most expensive tech to play most games that are out there.
    • Genuine XBox or PS4/5 controller. These standard controllers are generally pretty solid and durable. $60ish
    • new cpu ($$$, and may not even be an option): most games won’t be processor-bound. But some are cpu-heavy. Get this if you really want to upgrade overall, or have a particular title in mind that needs it. Or…
    • Low-mid range gaming computer ($900 ($600-$1500)): wait until you want to do a pc upgrade, and get a low-end gaming computer. I recommend Lenovo LOQ or Legion. Lenovo in general has provided laptops that don’t fall apart on me, and that’s not something I can say about most computer manufacturers. That said, keep them long enough and you’ll have to replace the keyboard - but that’s every laptop out there that I’ve run across.
    • or: go crazy and buy everything all the time at the moment it his the market because it is a game or has “game” written on, near, or associated with it (not recommended)