ZILtoid1991

joined 3 months ago
[–] ZILtoid1991 4 points 1 day ago

LLMs are not magic, otherwise one just have to request that any submission will have references to reputable sources.

[–] ZILtoid1991 14 points 1 day ago (1 children)

If that gets updated, then it will favor big corporations.

[–] ZILtoid1991 17 points 1 day ago

Issue is power imbalance.

There's a clear difference between a guy in his basement on his personal computer sampling music the original musicians almost never seen a single penny from, and a megacorp trying to drive out creative professionals from the industry in the hopes they can then proceed to hike up the prices to use their generative AI software.

[–] ZILtoid1991 3 points 1 day ago

I have that issue to a lesser degree, blame my anti-seizure meds' side effects.

[–] ZILtoid1991 1 points 1 day ago

You misinterpreted OP, otherwise I also do think the top scenario is weird.

[–] ZILtoid1991 7 points 2 days ago

Similar thing happened in my country, Hungary. We have a de facto one party system, where outsiders are allowed to have an opinion, nothing much else. Sometimes they have suspiciously too many ties to Fidesz, like Munkáspárt 2006 and Mi Hazánk Mozgalom. Corporations not being subservient to Fidesz are being harassed by law enforcement, the tax agency, and the media agency, only a few left as a way to show not everyone is with Fidesz, but often at the cost of them not getting any subsidies, etc. Meanwhile, Fidesz has clever ways to subvert even its own laws. They limit campaign spendings, but have at least 2 GONGOs pumping out ads for them.

Good luck, maybe the RNC won't forbid anyone left of Mussolini from owning guns, or maybe you can just wait until the US implodes and Canada will run to your help instead of Russia and/or China.

[–] ZILtoid1991 -4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

To all you inside the US: you might want to look up how assault rifles' can be modified to be automatic.

I have a feeling that if Trump wins, someone will do the nazi salute thing again, but maybe insert "hail god!" somewhere into it, and this time it'll be done by someone way more mainstream...

[–] ZILtoid1991 0 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I found your ballot box:

[–] ZILtoid1991 1 points 2 days ago

I noticed she not only have a fleshlight, but also a faint and very translucent navel.

[–] ZILtoid1991 4 points 2 days ago

that genie is not going back to the bottle

IDK, but the anti-GMO movement managed to mostly put back a genie into its bottle. We just need to fight harder.

[–] ZILtoid1991 2 points 2 days ago

I once did that, still was quite bad.

[–] ZILtoid1991 6 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Humans can write it too, you know!

 
 
 

I'm getting back into playing guitar, but I want to skip on constantly changing tunings and strings for them, also I would like some octaver effect or something like that.

883
Rule people (lemmy.world)
 
 
 
 

Display of OpenGL context works fine on Windows, no issues with resizing. Function glViewport works as intended.

It only has issues with X11 on Linux (no plans yet to implement Wayland due to lack of free time). Resizing breaks everything, and it doesn't really work the way you expect (point of triangle moves down if you make it taller, etc). I cannot find anything on if I should call anything else besides glViewport, only that "you should use [insert already existing library], which will take care of this behavior". Others are suggesting me that it's an issue with my distro, but I cannot find any OpenGL testcase that is small enough to test on my VM or my Raspberry Pi to actually test whether that's the case.

 

When resizing an X11 window with OpenGL content, the image becomes garbled and certain parts of the window, usually at the parts that wasn't originally part of the initial framebuffer.

I couldn't find any documentation on if I supposed to call some extra functions when the window is being resized or not. I otherwise process that even as a system event, so it can be further processed by the program using my API.

 

I started to use Linux Mint on my VM, however it seems like it uses a different channel for packages, which means I get some outdated packages such as D compilers, which makes me unable to compile my programs.

While the D compilers have some userspace installer scripts, they're userspace only, meaning they need initialization scripts, which only work until the end of the given shell instance, which makes it particularly hard to use in certain contexts.

Is there some "untested" or similar branch to get some newer stuff? The compilers don't seem to interfere with anything system level, so it should be fine.

305
Capitalism rule (lemmy.world)
submitted 3 weeks ago by ZILtoid1991 to c/196
 
 
 

So far, Ubuntu 24.04 was an absolute nightmare for me. While upgrading to it in a VM, it randomly crashed, which broke the GUI. I had to go to the tty, and finish the upgrade that way to get back into GNOME. Then every time I launched its default file manager or its screen settings app (which became mandatory as it just randomly switched to 1280x800, thus making work a nightmare), it crashed so hard it took the VM host with itself.

Switching to VMWare, it was more stable, stable, but after the first restart, I get a lot of graphical glitches and a black background. Tried Kubuntu to see if it's a GNOME-related thing, but similar issues prevail, this time with a tanked performance until I switch to tty.

I need an easy-to-use and relatively stable distro, for compiling, testing, and rewriting software with GUI, thus I cannot use WSL on Windows 10. I want to spend my time developing, and not resolving bugs, nor with tinkering with the OS. Likely I will have to keep my primary development platform as Windows, and Linux does not offer me anything more, and "deploying/cross compiling to Windows" is not very feasible to me at the moment due to I'm writing my own middleware to interface with OS API, and I also want to test on native Windows rather than in an emulator. Windows 11 might push me in the direction to use a Windows installation inside a VM, but only if disabling telemetry becomes impossible.

view more: next ›