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agent_flounder

@agent_flounder@lemmy.world

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agent_flounder,
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But stonks go up so win win /s

agent_flounder,
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More like, “what if it cuts our incessant growth in sales?!”

agent_flounder,
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Though enshittification was coined, I think, with online services in mind, this is a perfect example of the process as it applies to an OS.

agent_flounder,
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The software is almost certainly provided as is, with risks assumed by the person installing it.

Still, I doubt any dev wants a catastrophic outcome and takes steps to avoid that or warn the end user if the code is more likely to bork something.

I don’t think it’s unreasonable to expect the dev to do their best but it’s also not like you can sue them and win, most likely.

agent_flounder,
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Woah. 🤯 that is crazy cool. I feel like I’ve been visited by time travelers from the future.

agent_flounder,
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What is this door latch sorcery? How does it work?

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

Oh holy shit you’re right! Badlands Booker! Total legend. I actually met him at an eating contest way back. Seemed like a really cool guy.

agent_flounder, (edited )
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

Nothing wrong with Fedora Gnome. I’ve been using it for several months (well ok technically Nobara but I decided to try vanilla Fedora recently and it’s about the same). Prior to that I had been using Mint / Cinnamon for a decade and it’s a good choice too.

But truth be told the Gnome simplicity / minimalism has been growing on me. I wished it were more customizable but whatever.

Fedora is a very very mainstream distro, too, so help is easy to find if anything goes haywire.

PS: nobara is great for gaming but the big gotcha for me was that updating from the shell prompt requires a somewhat involved set of commands. If you use a simple dnf update you’ll break something like I did. Which is why I decided to give Fedora another go. If you choose Nobara, just use the (slow) GUI updater.

The other commenter who mentioned installing and using Gnome tweaks, etc. nailed it. Do that. :)

agent_flounder,
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Purple here for a while now. Maybe it’s time for a change.

agent_flounder,
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No, but this topic sent me down a rabbit hole briefly.

You may have heard of the Marshall Fire in Boulder, Colorado that burned 1000 homes and killed two people within the city in 2021.

In the area of the point of ignition of this wildfire, an underground coal fire has been known to be burning for the past 150 years. As far as I know they still haven’t ruled it out as a possible cause.

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

glances over my shoulder at an enormous pile of identical boxes

Cops Used DNA to Predict a Suspect’s Face—and Tried to Run Facial Recognition on It (www.wired.com)

For facial recognition experts and privacy advocates, the East Bay detective’s request, while dystopian, was also entirely predictable. It emphasizes the ways that, without oversight, law enforcement is able to mix and match technologies in unintended ways, using untested algorithms to single out suspects based on unknowable...

agent_flounder, (edited )
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

Propublica did an article on that.

propublica.org/…/understanding-junk-science-foren…

E.g.

The reliability of bloodstain-pattern analysis has never been definitively proven or quantified, but largely due to the testimony of criminalist Herbert MacDonell, it was steadily admitted in court after court around the country in the 1970s and ’80s. MacDonell spent his career teaching weeklong “institutes” in bloodstain-pattern analysis at police departments around the country, training hundreds of officers who, in turn, trained hundreds more.

In 2009, a watershed report commissioned by the National Academy of Sciences cast doubt on the discipline, finding that “the uncertainties associated with bloodstain-pattern analysis are enormous,” and that experts’ opinions were generally “more subjective than scientific.” More than a decade later, few peer-reviewed studies exist, and research that might determine the accuracy of analysts’ findings is close to nonexistent.

agent_flounder,
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Or sitting behind the defense table.

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

One of us could probably put that together pretty quickly lol

But if we did want to build a new distro recommender… Maybe there are like 5 or so questions that would be relevant.

Just off the top of my head some possibilities:

If you’re a beginner, Mint is a good choice. One could argue Ubuntu (noobs don’t gaf about snap if they even know what it is). I think noobs would want good GUI tools and a very popular, very polished distro. So issues are infrequent but finding answers is easy.

Into gaming? There’s a few distros that come up like Nobara. (I’ve seen Manjaro mentioned but idk).

If you want something that looks kinda like macos there’s Endeavor. Does anyone recommend that one these days? I don’t usually see it mentioned.

Idk.

You’re probably right, an rng that chooses between a few distros might be better lol

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

Ah right. I’m an idiot.

linux mint became super slow

so im not sure if this is update related or storage related. somewhere online told me to check ‘page faults’ and theyre at 16998 MINFL and 114 MAJFL. i ran out of storage on my ssd so i clesred half of it by deleting timeshift snapshots (and disabled it). it’s still running like a slug. once an application is open, it’s...

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

PS: if the disk fills up after deleting files (with rm) then some process may be the cause. Use the iotop command to show what processes are doing the most reading and writing, similar to top but for io.

If you haven’t you can also hunt down the biggest directories either with a disk usage analyzer or command line. Cd into whatever to level directly (your home dir) then: sudo du -dk | sort -n

agent_flounder, (edited )
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

I agree with the other comment to beware and look at getting a new drive in case this one is shitting the bed.

If it were my system I would look for any signs of disk related errors in the logs (likely would show in /var/log/syslog or maybe kern.log).

Also, did you empty your trash (if you used GUI to kill the files)?

You verified the disk has free space right? (Via df or whatever GUI tool, maybe disks or the file manager)

Another thing I might look at out of curiosity is disk io stats. Is the disk swamped with IO for some reason? We’re assuming the bottleneck is disk io but then again maybe something else weird is going on.

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

PS:

What pipewire packages are installed?

What alsa packages are installed?

I’m wondering if something is missing or borked for some reason.

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

Reinstalling alsa utils twice? Interesting and weird.

Any chance some other software is messing things up? Is pulse audio installed too? Jack? Other? Just tossing out crazy ideas here, idk.

Wonder if the kernel version has a known issue with your specific hardware? What hardware is it, btw?

Like the other person said I would definitely want to see if there are any errors in the logs.

agent_flounder, (edited )
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

Sorry I didn’t get back to you sooner.

Nope, I’ve checked and I don’t have any PulseAudio, JACK, or other audio packages

Ok good. We should be able to rule that out.

Could be kernel related, I don’t know.

What version? The command uname -r will give it to you. More info here

Also… If you run dmesg do you see any audio related devices or errors? I should’ve thought to ask about that last time.

Want to know what’s even more fun? I need to re-install alsa-utils thrice now

Whee!™ Are we having fun yet lol

That is seriously bizarre.

Did I ask what audio hardware chipset you’re using?

It should show up in dmesg output. Or alternatively look up your motherboard specs and get it that way. Assuming you’re using the built in motherboard audio and not a separate card.

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

Hm. Nothing really jumping out then. I am racking my brain trying to think of anything else to look at.

Dumb question but… Shouldn’t headphones be plugged into the headphone jack, not line out?

Headphones typically have a lower impedance than, say, an amplifier.

I’m just wondering if the audio hardware checks load impedance for audio out to prevent issues and the headphones are reading too low (tens to hundreds of ohms instead of, say, 10k-100k ohm or whatever) for a line out.

I don’t know how that explains reinstalling alsa-utils twice or thrice to fix it until the next reboot. So I guess my theory isn’t all that great.

Does it make a difference if you unplug the headphones before rebooting?

agent_flounder,
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Hell yeah. And I don’t even like the Dead (sorry don’t hate me) but anybody living their best life vs living to work is ok in my book.

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