itsnotlupus

joined 1 year ago
[–] itsnotlupus@lemmy.world 5 points 8 months ago

It's weirdly difficult to remap the "office" key so that pressing it won't open an ad for ms office 365 and pressing office+L won't open linkedin.com, and a few more equally valuable core OS features.

In the end I just had to grab a small bit of C code from GitHub, compile it, move the exe to the startup folder, have Windows Defender yell at me for having obviously installed a particularly nasty brand of trojan, and make Windows Defender put the executive I had just compiled back.

But really, I deserve this for using a Microsoft natural keyboard in the first place.

[–] itsnotlupus@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Pixel 7 with a barely customized Nova Launcher, because I'm basic but I need rounded square icons.
The background looks iffy in the shot, but it's a live wallpaper from Shader Editor running Machine DNA's GLSL shader with minimal tweaks needed to make it fit on the phone.
That weird twitter icon is a Firefox PWA running twitter.com with various userscripts installed, to remove antifeatures and bad logos.

[–] itsnotlupus@lemmy.world 22 points 1 year ago

I vote for xX-[X]-Xx

Alas, this being the darkest timeline, we'll probably end up with X Social.

[–] itsnotlupus@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I've been having fun writing a dumb userscript to help me cope with this.

Yes, it can put back a bird of your choosing as a logo, but why stop there.

Instead of tweeting on Twitter, I can now spez on Reddit, skeet on Bluesky, or just eXecrate on X, the Elon way.

It's ridiculous and pointless, and I'm not sorry.

[–] itsnotlupus@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Well, this was before his dark period. He was still trying.

And also, how dare you sir!

[–] itsnotlupus@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I just watched the trailer, and it feels really familiar, like I've seen it before, but I don't really remember anything about it..

...so I guess I'll just watch it (again.)

Thanks for the suggestion!

[–] itsnotlupus@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Yes, there's an underlying taste of "oh my god look how they massacred a great idea" to it, but I've learned to swish it in my mouth and savor it by now.

[–] itsnotlupus@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (7 children)

Next (2007), starring the One True God, alongside Julianne Moore and Jessica Biel.

It's a brilliant movie (loosely) based on a Philip K Dick short story. It's been nominated and won actual awards (Worst Actor and Worst Supporting Actress from the prestigious Razzie Awards, Worst Foreign Actor from the Yoga Awards), and it stands the test of time comfortably at 28% on the tomatometer.

I wish I was kidding. I've watched this over a dozen times. I can't stop. Send help.

[–] itsnotlupus@lemmy.world 25 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

You can list every man page installed on your system with man -k . , or just apropos .
But that's a lot of random junk. If you only want "executable programs or shell commands", only grab man pages in section 1 with a apropos -s 1 .

You can get the path of a man page by using whereis -m pwd (replace pwd with your page name.)

You can convert a man page to html with man2html (may require apt get man2html or whatever equivalent applies to your distro.)
That tool adds a couple of useless lines at the beginning of each file, so we'll want to pipe its output into a | tail +3 to get rid of them.

Combine all of these together in a questionable incantation, and you might end up with something like this:

mkdir -p tmp ; cd tmp
apropos -s 1 . | cut -d' ' -f1 | while read page; do whereis -m "$page" ; done | while read id path rest; do man2html "$path" | tail +3 > "${id::-1}.html"; done

List every command in section 1, extract the id only. For each one, get a file path. For each id and file path (ignore the rest), convert to html and save it as a file named $id.html.

It might take a little while to run, but then you could run firefox . or whatever and browse the resulting mess.

Or keep tweaking all of this until it's just right for you.

[–] itsnotlupus@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago

He literally just fixed it, and he learned nothing from this, Dunning-Kruger as strong as always.

[–] itsnotlupus@lemmy.world 22 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Instead of simply blurring them, it'd be technically possible to feed their images through a stable diffusion prompt, like "humanoid lizards" or "frantic lemmings"..
Also, I understand that a large language model could be made to rewrite articles about them with a matching prompt.

That would be very silly, of course.

[–] itsnotlupus@lemmy.world 15 points 1 year ago (3 children)

More appropriate tools to detect AI generated text you mean?

It's not a thing. I don't think it will ever be a thing. Certainly not reliably, and never as a 100% certainty tool.

The punishment for a teacher deciding you cheated on a test or an assignment? I don't know, but I imagine it sucks. Best case, you'd probably be at risk of failing the class and potentially the grade/semester. Worst case you might get expelled for being a filthy cheater. Because an unreliable tool said so and an unreliable teacher chose to believe it.

If you're asking what's the answer teachers should know to defend against AI generated content, I'm afraid I don't have one. It's akin to giving students math homework assignments but demanding that they don't use calculators. That could have been reasonable before calculators were a thing, but not anymore and so teachers don't expect that to make sense and don't put those rules on students.

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