• 51 Posts
  • 315 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: November 27th, 2023

help-circle


  • Pro:

    • do most of what needed two phones on a single phone
    • avoids charging, carrying, and maintaining two separate phones
    • I’d personally put a lot more here if dual-booting Android and Linux

    Con:

    • hard to find a phone that supports it
    • the need to unlock bootloader could still break integrity checks despite using a stock ROM
    • IMEI still shared between ROMs, most of the isolation is already achievable through user profiles
    • have to reboot to use anything on the other ROM



  • 16 GB VRAM GPU, models stored on SSD, rest of the computer doesn’t have to be crazy. Intel Arc is best bang for the buck at the moment. You can get LLM running on 8 GB cards or even the CPU, but IMO such small models are more novelties than workhorses. I personally use Debian but you’ll be fine as long as your distro’s repo has drivers recent enough for your GPU.

    For perspective, I’m using such a build to help with boilerplate code, single-use scripts that I don’t have the patience to trial-and-error (like ones that have to deal with directory structures and special characters), getting an idea of what’s what when decompiling and reverse engineering, brainstorming tip-of-the-tongue ideas, and upscaling images.



  • There is a particular camera app that a few of my close friends and I have used for group photos since over a decade ago. It’s proprietary and tracker-infested, but there’s a certain humor and nostalgia to the filters and effects that I’ve never found a good way to replicate without the app. It’s sort of an in-joke that we insist on using it whenever we do get together. So I have it on my secondary device and painstakingly patched the apk so it can run without any unnecessary permissions.


  • I’m really happy that the schools I went to used a similar projection for all of their world map posters. I think there’s more educational value to seeing all the landmasses and countries properly scaled in size. It’s not like we’re going to navigate the world using some random Mercator projection poster torn from the wall.


  • I don’t have a good answer, but I wonder the same and about the technical reasons why, if some websites require such data, the browser can’t just lie and touch up rendering in post to fit whatever unique window size I have. AFAIK, uBlock already does some of its own CSS touch-up so there aren’t awkward gaps where ads once were.

    Of the browsers I’ve tried out, the Cromite project goes furthest to mitigate and obfuscate the data it hands out, but in their words, it’s still not comprehensive.


  • All sorts of animals have superior application-specific circuitry. Like bearded vultures that, while in flight, can drop bones precisely onto rocks to break them open and get at the marrow. But they lack the general-purpose processing power needed to abstract such skills into mathematical representations. Same abstraction likely needed to apply one skill creatively to other uses or apply logic to analyze something.

    I’m no neuroscientist/biologist, but I could see an ideal scenario and measurement setup where dolphins and orcas maybe rival our general-purpose intelligence. But whatever it is, it still isn’t enough for them to build any recognizable society yet.



  • Or maybe Meta’s walled garden is impenetrable to scraping?

    afaik, that’s the case for Instagram. After scouring the internet for frontends, there are 3 archetypes:

    • black boxes like imginn, gets you images and nothing else. no source code to audit, self-host, or build an API
    • self-hostable frontends that get rate limited almost instantly, even for a single user
    • proper alternative clients that got cease-and-desisted into the ground

    They did a great job making a panopticon, closed to the outside, yet devoid of privacy





  • Prepaid IoT sim cards

    Not a heavy user, so I purchased one for 60 US that gets me 365 days of service or 24 GB, whichever depletes sooner. It defaults to T-Mobile coverage but can fall back to AT&T. No KYC. There are more premium options that get you Verizon coverage, also saw one advertising 300 GB a month at 50 Mbps for 350 a year, haven’t tried those yet though.

    For the curious, I purchased from https://www.smartsimpro.com/, their website doesn’t give the best first impressions, but I can say that their data plan does work reliably for me once I configured the APN settings.


  • There’s always the risk of spying if a game requires an internet connection, no matter who published it, but unless you plan to be in China later on, there’s not much that Chinese companies (or authorities, if that is of concern) can do with the data collected on you.

    I suppose some company could sell that data back to a US firm in a roundabout way. Anyway, take what I say with a grain of salt since I’ve hardly played or looked into any games requiring an internet connection.