hinterlufer

joined 2 years ago
[–] hinterlufer 1 points 4 days ago

you could try LMDE (Mint but with Debian underneath instead of Ubuntu). But I kinda doubt that this would help. You probably won't notice a difference in the user experience.

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

That's odd... any idea what the model of the WiFi adapter is? Is it a very recent machine?

[–] hinterlufer 6 points 4 days ago (6 children)

No, that won't work on a live system.

Have you actually tried booting from a Live USB on the laptop in question? It might be that WiFi works there just out of the box. Unless you have some super weird wifi adapter (or use an old Linux version), it should just work.

[–] hinterlufer 9 points 5 days ago

(there's the open source free full version on F-Droid)

[–] hinterlufer 61 points 1 week ago (15 children)

I find it really interesting that almost all of the recent comments on the YouTube video are 95% the same and praising "how great all this transparency" is, completely drowning out all other comments. They're also worded very very similarly.

[–] hinterlufer 2 points 1 week ago

Jap... bin gestern erst am Versuch mein Minze 20.04 hochzubewerten gescheitert. Hab dann stattdessen LMDE drübergebügelt...

[–] hinterlufer 2 points 1 week ago

They're both code/text editors, or what would you call VSCode instead? An IDE? you can make an IDE out of nvim if you want.

Yes, there is a vim mode in VSCode, but in some cases it can be very slow (like editing a few thousand columns at once), and is not as tightly integrated.

[–] hinterlufer 25 points 1 week ago (19 children)

1 kW is 3412 BTU/h (=BTUs)

Most induction stovetops have a boost function with around 3-4 kW (that's about 13000 BTUs).

BUT contrary to a gas stove top, almost all of the energy is actually put into the pot instead of the surroundings (only 30-40% of the energy from a gas stove is used to heat the pot). Meaning that a 4 kW induction cooktop should be comparable to a 40'000 BTUs gas stove (single burner).

[–] hinterlufer 5 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Most nvim users I know have their setup very much customized. That takes time, effort and is a pita. But afterwards you have a tool that just works like you want it to work, and is super fast (at least compared to VSCode).

[–] hinterlufer 9 points 1 week ago (4 children)

you can change that if it bothers you

[–] hinterlufer 33 points 1 week ago (7 children)

well yes it's inconvenient to have to pay to pretend to be in another country to access a website

[–] hinterlufer 3 points 2 weeks ago

Get a 2 TB SSD (the one you chose is fine)

54
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by hinterlufer to c/nostupidquestions
 

It seems like with the current progress in ML models, doing OCR should be an easy task. After all, recognizing handwritten numbers was one of the prime benchmarks for image recognition (MNIST was released in 1994).

Yet, when I try to OCR any of my handwritten notes all I ever get is a jumbled mess of nonsense. Am I missing something, is my handwriting really that atrocious or is it the models?

Here's a quick example, a random passage from a scientific article:

I tried EasyOCR, Tesseract, PPOCR and a few online tools. Only PPOCR was able to correctly identify the numbers and the words "J." and "Chem.". The rest is just a random mess of characters.

Edit: thank you all for shitting on my handwriting. That was not asked for, and also not helpful. That sample was intentionally "not nice" but is how I would write a note for myself. (You should see how my notes look like when I don't need to read them again, lol)

chatGPT can transcribe it perfectly, and also works on a slightly larger sample. Deepseek works ok-ish but made some mistakes, and gemini is apparently not available in my country atm. I guess the context awareness is what makes those models better in transcription, and also why I can read it back without problems.

15
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by hinterlufer to c/gardening
 

So I got my hands on some flower bulbs which are typically meant to be planted in spring and I was wondering what I could do with them now. To be concrete, I have

  • Dahlia
  • Mirabilis jalapa
  • Ixia

I'm in USDA zone 7b/8a and I could either place them on a south facing balcony or inside. I've also read that you can force flowers in a vase with some bulbs such as Hyacinths but I haven't read anything about that with the ones I have. Or should I just keep them in storage until next spring and plant them then?

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