I’m not sure if this is triggering either thalassophobia or submechanophobia but either way thanks I hate it
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Rookeh@startrek.websiteto
Technology@lemmy.world•Google Starts Scanning All Your Photos As New Update Goes LiveEnglish
9·25 days agoSame, I set it up a few years ago and both me and my partner have been using it since then with no issues at all, it’s completely replaced Google Photos for us.
We’ve also set up immich-frame and repurposed an old Google Nest hub to use as a digital photo frame.
Rookeh@startrek.websiteto
Games@lemmy.world•What was the first game you ever bought ?English
2·2 months agoThis might not actually be the first one, but one of the earliest games I definitely remember actually buying with my own money was Geoff Crammond’s Grand Prix 2. I would have been around 7 or so.
Definitely worth it, great game and the demos on the CD introduced me to Transport Tycoon, and the XCom and Worms franchises - and things kind of snowballed from there!
Cable wasn’t as much as a thing over here except in specific areas, but if you were flush you might have satellite TV. Nothing so bourgeois for me though!
I was born in 89, so remember a good portion of the 90s. It was a much simpler time but obviously we tend to romanticise the fun memories and quietly ignore how vastly more inconvenient daily life was.
Mobile phones were not really a thing yet so getting in touch with your friends required a combination of patience and sheer luck.
The internet was a different place entirely and was experienced in 30 minute chunks of time, just long enough to download a song or two before being kicked off for tying up the landline.
Daily entertainment was 4, maybe 5 analogue TV channels, plus a collection of VHS tapes which are all degrading by being rewatched constantly.
Every piece of life admin that you would normally do online today was instead done with pen and paper.
Honestly, I’m amazed we ever got anything done.
Rookeh@startrek.websiteto
Formula 1@lemmy.world•2026 Australian Grand Prix - [POST RACE] discussion thread 🏁
5·2 months agoFerrari F1: I sleep
Ferrari WEC: real shit
He is the manifestation of the ‘I made this’ meme. Among other things.
Rookeh@startrek.websiteto
Privacy@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Your ring camera is being used to abduct your neighbors
5·4 months agoThey have. The Doorbell Lite is $99.
Rookeh@startrek.websiteto
Technology@lemmy.world•"Microslop" trends in backlash to Microsoft's AI obsessionEnglish
3·4 months agoYou are assuming that they have a personality to begin with.
Rookeh@startrek.websiteto
Programming@programming.dev•Microsoft wants to replace its entire C and C++ codebase, perhaps by 2030 - Plans move to Rust, with help from AI
18·5 months agoI have witnessed companies make this exact mistake before - they have a legacy system written in $LanguageA that they either cannot find developers to maintain, believe is badly written, or does not support some new feature they want to implement (or some combination of the three) - and decide to solve this by taking the existing codebase and porting/transpiling it to $LanguageB (which is more modern, performant, is easy to hire developers for, etc) - without actually rewriting or rearchitecting anything.
What they are actually doing is substituting one kind of tech debt for another. The existing code that was poorly written and/or not well understood is now just bad code written in a different language. Fixing bugs or implementing new features now takes just as long, if not longer to account for the idiosyncrasies of how the code was ported.
And now this is being done by AI with even less oversight than usual? Recipe for a maintenance disaster.
Rookeh@startrek.websiteto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What the heck is this stain by my window?
14·8 months agoAs others have said, 100% a leak.
I would advise to stand on a chair or stepladder underneath the ceiling and check to see if it is still level. If you see an obvious deformation around the stain, this will be being caused by water pooling on top of the ceiling plasterboard. In which case, once the leak is sorted, you will likely need to drain the pooled water, cut out the damaged section, replace it, then replaster and repaint.
We had exactly the same issue in our last house. It was in a difficult to see spot hidden behind our kitchen cabinets. We only realised the severity of the issue when the ceiling boards gave way and fell on my head.
Rookeh@startrek.websiteto
Technology@lemmy.world•Computer Science, a popular college major, has one of the highest unemployment ratesEnglish
8·9 months agoThere are only two industries that call their customers ‘users’…
I dunno, I reckon ‘DRAL YAES’ goes harder
Rookeh@startrek.websiteto
Linux@programming.dev•Linux has over 6% of the desktop market? Yes, you read that right - here's how
9·10 months agoI’ve switched both my laptop and desktop over to Linux (Bazzite and Fedora respectively) in the last 6 months.
The last time I tried to daily Linux (over a decade ago) I ended up switching back eventually, but this time I really don’t think I’ll need to. All of the games I play most often work perfectly, the dev tooling is even better than it is on Windows, and the hardware compatibility side has been completely flawless.
Gone are the days of having to hunt down obscure Linux drivers for your touchpad or webcam. Everything just works out of the box.
Rookeh@startrek.websiteto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Those of you that back your vehicle into parking spots, why do you do it?
2·1 year agoBecause, unless you’re driving a forklift, the point of a vehicle’s rotation is in line with the rear wheels, meaning you can take turns at a much more acute angle when reversing than going forwards. Which makes backing into spaces much easier.
Notice that most of the half-assed parking jobs you see are generally people who have driven forward and left the car parked at a diagonal half out of the space, because getting the vehicle lined up in that situation is more difficult.
Rookeh@startrek.websiteto
News@lemmy.world•Amid its worst ever crisis, Tesla offers discounts on its best-selling car just weeks after new Model Y launch
6·1 year agoThe main issue was a catastrophic failure of the VC_FRONT module which is one of the critical onboard computers that manages things like the 12v battery and low voltage power distribution (basically a “smart” fuse box). Without it the car is bricked and cannot be driven.
That took several weeks and some back and forth around the extended warranty to resolve, and then even after that module was replaced, on my first drive after the repair it went straight into limp mode and then spent another week at the service centre having that diagnosed.
During this time I decided it might be time to start looking for a new car, ended up selling it a few months later and took delivery of a new Polestar 2.
Rookeh@startrek.websiteto
News@lemmy.world•Amid its worst ever crisis, Tesla offers discounts on its best-selling car just weeks after new Model Y launch
8·1 year agoI’m not sure why anyone expected a new facelift would improve sales. It’s clear the overall decline is associated with Musk going full mask-off fascist, given this, driving around in a car that looks unlike any previous Model Y just makes it completely obvious that you knew this and decided to buy one anyway. If they want to bolster sales, maybe they should have kept producing the pre-facelifted versions for a while.
Full disclosure, I used to own a Model 3. I had it for 5 years and was generally very happy with it - it was a great daily driver, cost very little to run and maintain, and (aside from a few issues later in my ownership, which was one of the reasons I decided to sell it) in general it was very easy to live with.
There are clearly some very skilled engineers at Tesla who know how to build a great product. It is a shame their efforts are being undermined by a fascist lunatic with a narcissist complex.






There’s a lot to cover here but I’ll try to touch on each point:
The key requirement is fast memory that can be addressed by your GPU, and ideally a lot of it - hence the insane cost of this hardware right now.
Remember that you need space for the model’s weights (think of this as its ‘knowledge base’) and the context window, which is basically the data needed for the LLM to keep track of your current conversation with it (effectively its short term memory).
With smaller pools of VRAM (8-16gb) you will have to compromise and either have a more capable model that will lose context quickly and start hallucinating, or a less capable model that can maintain a session for a bit longer but overall less ‘smart’.
For software - there are a couple of options for running the LLM itself, Llama.cpp is one of the more popular tools and is the one that I use. It has a web UI with the usual chat interface, and also exposes an API that you can plug other tools (e.g. opencode) into, depending on your use case.
In terms of hardware recommendations, at 20GB+ of VRAM you do have a bit more headroom compared to more consumer grade GPUs, but to be honest the most cost effective way to get a shitload of VRAM is likely not with a dedicated GPU but actually using a system based around a recent APU.
I got a Minisforum MS-S1 last year for exactly this purpose. It is based on AMD’s Strix Halo platform which it has in common with the Framework Desktop and a couple of other similar devices.
It has 128gb of unified RAM which can be divided between the GPU and CPU however you like, so plenty of capacity for even fairly chunky models. It also uses a tiny amount of power compared to a more traditional system with a dedicated GPU, while also giving really reasonable performance for most AI workloads, more than enough for use in a homelab.
For cloud rental - doable, but pricing is a factor, and of course this will not actually be running locally.
Usability - manage your expectations, but overall for a lot of use cases and of course depending on the model that you are running and the resources you throw at it, it can be comparable with especially older iterations of ChatGPT, Gemini etc.
But remember, you are not a Google or an Anthropic and do not have an infinite pool of compute to throw at your model, nor do you have access to the specific models they are using.