dfyx

joined 1 year ago
[–] dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de 5 points 2 days ago

36 / M / Germany

Pretty much spot on.

[–] dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de 13 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

タイッツー is definitely taittsuu. Twitter doesn't seem to use a katakana spelling. Your proposal of "tsuittaa" would be ツイッター. Same katakana but different order. There would be no reason to read Japanese from right to left. Might be an intentional pun though.

Edit: it's https://taittsuu.com/

[–] dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de 29 points 3 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

They don't owe you anything. Not sex, not a kiss, not a hug, not a second date, not even a smile. If the date goes well, you will get some or even all of those but if you try to force them, you will get nothing. Sure it can be disappointing if you put in a lot of effort and get nothing back but you will have to live with that. Sometimes people just aren't compatible and sometimes a date just goes wrong because of a weird coincidence.

Be nice, even if the date doesn't go as you wanted. Open communication goes a long way and chances are that the person you're talking to is just as insecure as you are. Explain (not accuse) why you don't think this situation will work out. If you're lucky, you can turn the conversation around. If not, at least you're ending the date in a civil way. That also (and especially) applies to talking on online dating platforms. Sometimes you can tell just from a conversation that things won't go anywhere. Way too many people just drop the conversation and move on which can feel pretty rude. Be nice, explain what's up, give them a friendly goodbye and then move on.

Those rules apply to both sides. You don't owe them anything either, especially if they get rude. You should still try to be friendly in case there is a misunderstanding but try to get yourself out of an uncomfortable situation before it gets worse. Your safety is still priority number one.

Edit: some more

Don't expect a relationship to last. Chances are it won't. But this isn't as pessimistic of a tip as you might expect. Even a single day of joy can be worth it if you manage your expectations. I've had a relationship crash and burn after seven years, I've had ones that lasted a couple of months and I've had someone ghost me after the second date. And still, all of them gave me amazing memories that I wouldn't want to miss and they helped me grow as a person. Allow things to grow on their own and enjoy the process. Maybe you will marry that person. Maybe you'll date them for a few months or years. Maybe you will never get past second base but stay platonic friends. Maybe you will spend the most amazing day of your life with them and then never see them again because you accidentally spilled something over their favorite t-shirt.

[–] dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Sure. I use it as a structured place to keep notes on anything that may be important later, not specifically tasks:

  • Important people in my life (friends and family) with a short bio, where we met, favorite food, allergies, ideas what I could get them for their birthdays, links to their social media profiles, plans for shared vacations, maybe a few photos.
  • Recipes from all kinds of sources. If they are from a video or one of those "scroll past three pages of sentimental nonsense" sites, I summarize them and translate them into German with metric units.
  • Lists with interesting links about 3D printing, software development and so on. Keeping these in a wiki instead of just my browser's bookmarks list allows me to better categorize them and add notes.
  • A list of open questions and project ideas that I can't research right now like "Where is the best place to get custom printed LEGO minifigs?" and "Why do the zfs drives in my home server sometimes have problems waking up from sleep?"
  • Lists of interesting products/books/movies/... that I might buy/read/watch/... at some point
  • Some writing stuff: D&D campaigns, short stories, diary-like entries
  • A list of all computers in my household with hardware specs, operating system and so on

All of those get put into categories and the categories are displayed on the main page via the categorytree plugin. The nice thing about having a wiki is that you have a lot of options for linking or embedding related content while still keeping it somewhat organized.

[–] dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de 3 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (2 children)

One doesn't have to be a Trump voter to think openly discussing murder is not okay. Especially because normalizing murder of one's political opponents plays right into right wing extremists' hands.

[–] dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de 6 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (4 children)

Just because you have IPv6 enabled doesn't mean you don't have IPv4. Both can coexist on the same network and the same device so your router can be 192.168.0.1 and some IPv6 address at the same time.

On top of that, many routers can be reached by a well-known hostname or domain, depending on their manufacturer. For example, AVM Fritz!Box routers (extremely popular in Germany) automatically resolve http://fritz.box/ to their own IP address no matter what that IP address is.

In the end, read the manual or the sticker on the device, same as you would have to do with IPv4 to figure out which subnet it is configured with.

[–] dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de 29 points 5 days ago (6 children)

I'll give it a shot. Not quite ELI5 but "Explain like I know what a phone number is". For the most important answer, see the last paragraph.

IP addresses are a bit like phone numbers. To send data to some computer, your computer attaches that number and sends the data packet on its way. With IPv4, an address is four bytes long, usually represented as four numbers from 0-255 separated with dots. That gives us a bit under 4.3 billion possible addresses which seemed enough when the system was invented and larger organizations could even reserve entire address ranges and some ranges got reserved for special purposes (for example, all 127.x.x.x addresses mean "send this to myself" while 192.168.x.x and 10.x.x.x are meant for local, non-public networks). Reserving these ranges is convinient when you need multiple machines connected to the internet but is very inefficient as these ranges need to be a power of two in size (256 is common), so you may get more addresses than you need and the rest stays unused.

The first solution was "Network Address Translation" (NAT). Basically, every household or organization gets a single public IPv4 address and every device on your network has a private address. On outgoing connections, your router replaces the (private) sender address with its public address and remembers which private address belongs to that connection so it can correctly forward any replies. For incoming connections, the router needs a list of rules to tell it what to do. For example something like "Everything on port 80 goes to 192.168.0.42". This worked for a while as most people make only outgoing connections and even many organizations can simply decide locally what to do with an incoming connection based on the received data so they wouldn't need multiple addresses.

After a while, it was clear that even with this workaround we would run out of addresses sooner or later. Providers tried giving their customers a different address every time they connected to the internet so they could reuse the address for someone else when the customer disconnected. This worked well when people only connected when they needed it but these days we're usually online 24/7.

So in the end, the only solution was to add more addresses. For our current needs, doubling the length would be more than enough but to be on the safe side, it was decided to quadruple the address length to a total of 16 bytes. This gives us about 340 undecillion unique addresses. Still not enough to give a unique address to every atom in the universe, not even enough for every atom on earth but still a lot. We can give every human an address range many times larger than the total address space of IPv4.

Does this mean that NAT is dead or that all your devices are visible from outside your network? Absolutely not. It means you can do that if you want. If your provider gives you a large address range, you can give each of your devices a different one and tell your router to forward everything. But you can also still use a single public address and/or tell your router to apply certain rules for what to do with incoming connections. There are also still address ranges that are meant purely for local use, equivalent to what 192.168.x.x and 10.x.x.x were in IPv4.

[–] dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de 9 points 1 week ago

Last week I found out that there are off-brand batteries for my DSLR cameras that can be charged directly through USB-C so I don't have to pack a different charger for every camera. Let that sink in!

Overall pretty great, in a pinch I can charge my laptop on a Nintendo Switch power supply. Now if I could just upgrade the last few remaining Micro-USB and Lightning devices without spending a fortune...

[–] dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de 7 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

Polarion. Wouldn't recommend it but it's what my employer wants me to use.

For personal stuff, I use a private MediaWiki instance (same software that runs Wikipedia) as my external brain.

[–] dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

See my first bullet point:

“I don’t like either option”: pick the lesser evil or vote third party

[–] dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de 20 points 1 week ago

There are 36 million Ukrainians. I doubt you'll find any property that they all have in common, except for being humans.

[–] dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de 10 points 1 week ago

Honestly, that was the option I had hoped for when I made that joke. I‘m happy for you.

 

For tabletop miniatures I prefer to use a flexible resin to avoid small details breaking off when removing supports or when a mini falls off the table. So far I've used Ameralabs TGM-7 but now that my current bottle is almost empty I'm thinking about looking into alternatives. At over 75€ per liter, TGM-7 is really expensive compared to other resins.

Amazon recommended me RESIONE TH72 as an alternative and there are others on the market like Sunlu Standard Plus. So far I couldn't find a good comparison between them. Do any of you have experience with any of those or other recommendations?

 

Finally found out what kept me from uploading photos directly to lemmy so hopefully it will work this time.

This is part of a series that I shot in 2020 and now I’ll finally have the chance to show them in an exhibition on Berlin later this year.

 

I made this list based on the instructions PDF that's available from LEGO's website. For most of these, it doesn't really matter if they are black, dark bluish gray or light bluish gray so I picked them based on what will most likely look good with the surrounding colors and what is cheapest on Bricklink.

Two notable parts: Technic, Axle and Pin Connector Perpendicular Double with Axle Connector 2L is only available in white (the same color as in the set) and for the Technic, Axle 1L with Pin without Friction Ridges "old" light gray is significantly cheaper than any of the newer colors except the included tan.

In general, if you want to save a few bucks, you can probably leave all tan and white pieces as they are. For me, the complete replacement (250 pieces) cost about 35€ plus shipping.

Count Number Name Original Replacement(s)
2 6346389 Technic, Axle and Pin Connector Perpendicular Double Split, Reinforced Sides White Dark Bluish Gray
5 6058177 Brick, Modified 1 x 2 with Studs on 1 Side White 4x Dark Bluish Gray, 1x Black
6 6289797 Technic, Axle 2L with Pin without Friction Ridges White Light Bluish Gray
4 4208160 Technic, Liftarm Thick 1 x 3 White Black
2 6370532 Technic, Axle and Pin Connector Perpendicular Double with Axle Connector 2L White Not available
10 371001 Plate 1 x 4 White 6x Dark Bluish Gray, 4x Light Bluish Gray
2 6360069 Technic, Liftarm Thin 1 x 5 - Axle Holes White Light Bluish Gray
2 389401 Technic, Brick 1 x 6 with Holes White Black
2 6001831 Technic, Liftarm Thick 1 x 9 White Dark Bluish Gray
4 6013938 Technic, Pin 3/4 Tan Dark Bluish Gray
6 4666579 Technic, Axle 1L with Pin without Friction Ridges Tan Light Gray
1 6117975 Bracket 1 x 2 - 2 x 2 Tan Dark Bluish Gray
8 4121921 Plate 1 x 3 Tan 4x Dark Bluish Gray, 2x Black, 2x Light Bluish Gray
4 4118790 Plate 2 x 3 Tan Dark Bluish Gray
4 4201062 Brick, Modified 1 x 4 with Studs on Side Tan 2x Dark Bluish Gray, 2x Black
5 4550323 Arch 1 x 4 Tan Black
2 4550324 Tile 1 x 4 Tan Black
1 6186258 Slope 45 2 x 4 Tan Dark Bluish Gray
2 4143409 Plate 1 x 10 Tan Dark Bluish Gray
7 6271820 Technic Bush Red Light Bluish Gray
30 6378120 Technic, Pin 1/2 with Friction Ridges Red Dark Bluish Gray
20 6360104 Technic, Pin with Friction Ridges and Tow Ball with Round Pin Hole Red Black
2 6384112 Bar 1L with 1 x 1 Round Plate with Hollow Stud Red Black
31 4142865 Technic, Axle 2L Notched Red Black
7 300421 Brick 1 x 2 Red 4x Dark Bluish Gray, 3x Black
1 6385920 Technic, Brick Modified 1 x 2 with Hole and 1 x 2 Plate Red Light Bluish Gray
2 6271827 Technic, Liftarm, Modified Bent Thick L-Shape 2 x 4 Red Black
3 6130002 Technic, Axle 6L Red Black
1 6335578 Tile 2 x 6 Red Black
2 379521 Plate 2 x 6 Red Dark Bluish Gray
1 6130005 Technic, Axle 10L Red Black
7 4206482 Technic, Axle 1L with Pin with Friction Ridges Blue Black
20 6299413 Technic, Pin 3L with Friction Ridges Blue Black
4 6271167 Technic Bush 1/2 Smooth Yellow Light Bluish Gray
14 654124 Technic, Brick 1 x 1 with Hole Yellow 8x Black, 6x Dark Bluish Gray
1 6344181 Plate, Modified 1 x 2 with Pin Hole on Top Yellow Light Bluish Gray
8 6130007 Technic, Axle 3L Yellow Black
1 6072627 Technic, Liftarm, Modified T-Shape Thick 3 x 3 Yellow Light Bluish Gray
2 362224 Brick 1 x 3 Yellow Black
2 6170294 Technic, Liftarm Thin 1 x 6 Yellow Black
4 6474196 Bar 1L with Tow Ball Orange? Dark Bluish Gray
4 4164022 Brick 1 x 2 Lime Green? Dark Bluish Gray
1 4164037 Plate 1 x 2 Lime Green? Dark Bluish Gray
5 4537937 Plate 2 x 2 Lime Green? 1x Light Bluish Gray, 4x Dark Bluish Gray
 
 

Can we please get a post that explains what this community is for? Seems like nobody reads the sidebar (which is hard to access on most mobile clients) so we constantly get flooded with questions that would rather fit in !lemmy_support@lemmy.ml or !fediverse@lemmy.world

I understand that many people are still confused by how lemmy works but we should make clear that this is for general questions and discussions similar to what /r/askreddit was and not a place to ask technical questions about lemmy.

 

The fediverse is discussing if we should defederate from Meta's new Threads app. Here's why I probably won't (for now).

(Federation between plume and my lemmy instance doesn't work correctly at the moment, otherwise I would have made this a proper crosspost)

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