• 2 Posts
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Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: January 17th, 2022

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  • Honestly try whatever you want, from Godot to bash on the command line (I’m not even joking) then while doing so, write down what you learn and, as importantly, what is missing. If something is missing and it’s a very VERY big deal for you to re-implement (say 3D engine, or VR support, or cross platform support) then and ONLY THEN do look at other engines. See which ones out there do have both what you needed so far AND what is missing. Do NOT think ahead of all the “cool” things you “might need one day” because you would then look for the “perfect” engine for a project that does not even exist in your mind.

    TL;DR: it does not matter, pick any, build, share, iterate and pick another one whenever you want to.



  • I’m using SoundCloud via the browser. I enjoy the suggestions, keeping things fresh.

    For offline on mobile I use their app which does have an offline mode for your “Liked” songs and specific playlists.

    If I wanted an offline library proper, I’d sail the high seas but I personally do not feel the need for it for now.




  • instead of searching and installing all your apps one-by-one

    And… that takes what, a good all 5 minutes?

    Honestly unless you either re-install an OS frequently (which is a weird thing to do on a day-to-day system) or plan to go offline for a long period of time I bet you’d spend more time finding a “solution” then not doing so manually.

    I’m not you but when I install a fresh OS (maybe once every couple of years, at most!) on my desktop (not counting other devices, handheld, servers, etc) I install

    • Firefox (if it’s not already by default, if it’s ESR then I might get a different update mechanism)

    …well honestly that’s it!

    Then yes as I start to work I add KDEnlive, OBS, Blender, Cura, OpenSCAD, etc.

    My point being that I can’t imagine a moment when, as you start the OS you actually need all the other software at the same time. You usually need one, then another, e.g. Inkscape to edit a PDF document you just received, then you pass the extract image to e.g. LibreOffice Writer.

    So… not having everything from the start is IMHO a good moment to consider what you actually need, keep things lean.

    TL;DR: there are technical solutions but on a desktop connected to the Internet it’s not worth it.

    PS: I do personally keep my bash history or my ~/bin/ and ~/Apps/~ directories across installations (because I do keep ~` on a dedicated partition) with some AppImages in but honestly I don’t rely on these.




  • At some point if they have ridiculous restrictions one might consider … doing the test in person, in a room provided by the actual school or that THEY provide the hardware.

    Anyway IMHO the bigger point is that a lot of my own inaction (I won’t speak for others) came from fear of problems that rarely, if ever, materialized. I would recommend to move on and if the problem does actually arise then consider solutions at that point.

    I uninstalled Windows on my SSD years ago (despite paying for it, forced by OEM deals), didn’t regret it once. In fact, I wear it as a “badge of honor” with pride. When someone tells me I “have” to use Windows for whatever reason, I tell them I can’t and that usually leads to interesting conversations.




  • It’s not Ireland but I was just recently in Guernsey and… cars would drive over the sidewalk constantly (without putting pedestrian at risks AFAICT). Plenty of roads (if not most) on the island had just 0 sidewalk, like none. The road itself would often not accommodate 2 cars passing each other.

    In such context I can imagine that indeed high-vis jackets would somehow help… but damn, just don’t make your entire country, or small island country-ish in my personal example, car-centric then you wouldn’t have to ask pedestrians to be “visible” in order not to die.





  • Believe Microsoft, believe us… but verify.

    I assume (but I haven’t tried nor do I want to touch any of these) that you could verify using novel sequences, e.g. type in what you assume is isolated “This is a sentence and…” then try completion. You might get a result e.g. “is grammatically correct” or “I like potatoes”. You can try that few times just to get some sample. Try then to try in the other context you assume might actually not be isolate, e.g. your browser “This is a sentence and noise is blue.” and repeat that several times. If “noise is blue” never ever appeared before and it now does then you can safely assume that regardless of what Microsoft said, there is actually no isolation.

    TL;DR: trust but verify. Yourself. Now.