realbadat

joined 8 months ago
[–] realbadat@programming.dev 41 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (7 children)

Yeah, super crazy, had to look it up. Al voices a character named "Cheese Sandwich" (ffs Weird Al is amazing), who in a finale is shown years in the future to be married to Pinkie Pie.

Apparently Cheese Sandwich's personality is just... Weird Al. Which is also pretty hilarious.

[–] realbadat@programming.dev 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Ah, admittedly I avoid that problem entirely, I have an MTR, a ZR, etc running on devices here (hardware/software testing stuff), so I don't need to run meetings on my desktop often.

Edit: Just to note, I've done USB passthrough with VMs that were ZR builds and such, so that can be done. But I think if your sharing from there it can get messy (USB video capture and such as your sharing method, so on).

[–] realbadat@programming.dev 7 points 4 months ago (6 children)

I have several for work that will likely never work in Linux.

So those have a nice little VM they sit on, which has been stripped bare of the nonsense. Remote desktop access enabled, and I can do what I need whenever.

[–] realbadat@programming.dev 4 points 4 months ago

Take a look at Apache OFBiz, Akounting, Frappe Books, and LedgerSMB.

[–] realbadat@programming.dev 3 points 4 months ago (2 children)

I mean... I have a usb external 3.5" drive...

As well as DVD of course.

[–] realbadat@programming.dev 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Maybe it's just to me, but liberal/national coalition and labor seem like the two major parties, green is barely at the table still.

If you exclude the coalition, national has 4 times the representation of green, and liberal 3 times that.

Just my opinion here, but it's still two major parties, with the thirds coming up in ranks and getting some momentum going. It'll be a good day imo when the greens overtake the nationals (and maybe one day the liberals), but I personally don't see it as representative of the people yet. Improving, but still functionally two parties.

[–] realbadat@programming.dev 2 points 4 months ago (3 children)

It's still not that old (~10 years or so iirc), it takes time for a third party to be major contentender. Earlier on you're more likely to see third party wins in more local than national level elections.

It's not an insta-win for third parties. But that's ok, because local elections matter, and that's where you'd typically see results first.

[–] realbadat@programming.dev 11 points 4 months ago (3 children)

Mythbusters streamlined is like that. A bit rough on some cuts imo, but overall just cuts the fluff.

[–] realbadat@programming.dev 11 points 4 months ago

I firmly disagree, your brothers taught you the correct greeting.

[–] realbadat@programming.dev 1 points 4 months ago

Studio monitors are excellent choices, but expensive. I've used genelecs for pretty much every audio workstation I've ever done, I'm a huge fan, but you're also talking $800 and up.

You can sometimes find a good deal on some used studio monitors, which to me is the way to go. A long ways back I decommissioned some genelecs for a studio (surprise surprise, the new studio had newer versions of the same model), and I've been using them since at home. Roughly 15 years now.

[–] realbadat@programming.dev 12 points 4 months ago

I wouldn't say they are wrong, I've got plenty of issues with Firefox that aren't in chromium-based browsers. Mostly with media playback, but on Android the toolbar hide on scroll is a mess, no matter what it just covers the page. Makes it really hard to use a menu or click a button depending on where it is. I also have some locally run services that throw js errors in FF but not in cromite, chromium, or chrome.

Doesn't mean I don't prefer FF because I acknowledge it has problems. I don't generally view videos in my browser anyway, and I disable the hide-on-scroll feature. And if I have a particularly problematic site (the js errors), I open cromite or whatever.

The bigger issue isn't people talking about bugs, but downplaying the role the foundation plays in supporting users. That, imo, is where a lot of misinformation and disinformation seems to live.

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