random72guy

joined 1 year ago
[–] random72guy 36 points 3 months ago (3 children)

Honk if you have ever been personally victimized by HONK!

[–] random72guy 2 points 3 months ago

As a longtime Heroes of thr Storm player, it had just the level of ability and territory progression I wanted.

[–] random72guy 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

For LLMs, I've had really good results running Llama 3 in the Open Web UI docker container on a Nvidia Titan X (12GB VRAM).

For image generation tho, I agree more VRAM is better, but the algorithms still struggle with large image dimensions, ao you wind up needing to start small and iterarively upscale, which afaik works ok on weaker GPUs, but will gake problems. (I've been using the Automatic 1111 mode of the Stable Diffusion Web UI docker project.)

I'm on thumbs so I don't have the links to the git repos atm, but you basically clone them and run the docker compose files. The readmes are pretty good!

[–] random72guy 4 points 4 months ago
[–] random72guy 6 points 4 months ago

It was branded Rockman EXE in Japan, and NT Warrior (i.e. Net Warrior) in the US anime, only. The "network" refers to the internet and the internet of things heavily featured in the games, in which you battle viruses; hence "Battle Network."

[–] random72guy 14 points 4 months ago

Key quote:

To say that “political violence” has “no place” in a society organized by political violence at home and abroad is to acquiesce to the normalization of that violence, so long as it is state and capitalist monopolized.

[–] random72guy 12 points 5 months ago

A lot of my feelings got summed up here: basically, the episode had a lot of momentum and incoherence. Beyond that,

  • Having just watched "Pyramids of Mars," I'm puzzled Davis revived this villain, and that the impatient Sutekh acquired the patience to wait centuries (millennia?) to complete his plan.
  • I love the Memory TARDIS!
  • I thought 15 was supposed to be the "healed" doctor.
  • Davies is playing with the idea of concepts, perception, memory and faith influencing reality; but the handwavy, cursory explanations for how it all works makes it impossible to anticipate events or solutions to the challenges thr Doctor faces, which limits how the viewer can interact with the story and how engaged I feel. (E.g. when the Doctor says "there's nothing I can do" we just have to take him at his word, until it turns out all he had to do was leash Sutekh and drag him into the time vortex, and likely could have from the very start, given how Sutekh was restraining himself even before they discovered Ruby's mother. So the show becomes less of a thought exercise, more of waiting for the Doctor and plot to strikefamiliar chords.)
  • This isn't Davies' best work, but I'm hoping he's getting back into his groove. Either way, I'm hyped for Moffat's upcoming special!
[–] random72guy 5 points 7 months ago (2 children)

3 sticks of RAM...

[–] random72guy 6 points 10 months ago

I feel like I know that map... Zelda?

[–] random72guy 4 points 11 months ago

The original, Blue Raspberry.

[–] random72guy 40 points 1 year ago (1 children)

As a highly sensitive person, what I've learned for me is:

  1. It takes time - years, even - to understand what happened, and why. Which means there's nothing productive to be done except avoid things you'd regret. Be your best self, even if it's hard as hell. If you care about this person, give them the space they evidently need; and leave the door open to reconnecting later in until you've decided, with a clear head and understanding why, that you'll never eant them in your life.
  2. Prioritize caring for your basic mental and physical needs by getting enough sleep, food, exercise, and time outdoors.
  3. Treat yourself like you're sick with the flu or a cold. Get rest if you can. Find ways to relax. Give yourself time to heal. Mindless things like TV or videogames can be good. Socializing is also good.
  4. Partners can ground us; make us feel secure, taken care of, connected to our world, full of purpose and value, etc. In the long term, without them, you need to re-ground and find things that give you those feelings. I had to come up with a list of things that make me feel connected and worthwhile, then take steps to engage in those. It included creative hobbies and dedicating time to good friends. Finding "myself" and things that felt meaningful took work: self-reflection and journaling, forcing myself to do hobbies until I enjoyed them, and becoming inspired by good art (TV, music) I love. Often our roots are in our upbringing, so it can be good to reconnect with things we loved. Once you have a life without your ex, you don't need them. You don't need any partner as much, for that matter, because what sustains you is more within your power and identity. And that's how future relationships can be made safer, and heartbreak survivable.
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