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rollcat
Joined 5,173 karma
https://www.rollc.at/ kamil@rollc.at


  1. Nintendo has done this exact thing with the GameBoy: https://retrocomputing.stackexchange.com/q/11736

    If you mess with the logo, the console locks up during boot. If you don't, you're violating the trademark.

  2. Voting with your money doesn't work in a world where all wealth is concentrated in oligopolies.
  3. > [...] so you weren't able to change them yourself.

    This should be illegal. You're supposed to do what, stay on the roadside for 20h before an authorized repairman can reach you? What if the weather is harsh, and you run out of basic supplies like food or your medicine?

  4. You are an average person. A program you're using crashes.

    The only non-generic word you see in the crash message is "SQLite".

    You look it up, find SQLite, and you bother the developers for help.

    The problem is as old as labels.

  5. What about local friends?
  6. I agree and I do not agree. I still sometimes use a Thinkpad X230, and wait- a G4 PowerBook, and they are fine machines for many tasks. Yet even those have soldered CPUs, simply because of design constraints.

    You don't need to have to train models. You want to play a game like Factorio, that, of all things, is bottlenecked on memory bandwidth - you must update each entity in a huge world on every tick, at 60 UPS, and yes, the game is insanely well optimized (check the dev blog). You don't have to play Factorio, but you also technically don't need DMA.

  7. > Partnerships could mean more than just fab capacity -- maybe even incentives to build an instruction translation layer so software built for Intel chips could run natively on Apple Silicon. Something like Rosetta, but at the hardware level.

    Rosetta is pretty damn fine as-is, and yet Apple is removing it, because they don't care for supporting anything older than 7 years.

    Which is pretty hypocritical of them, touting gaming on Macs is good now, yet throwing 90% of the remaining game library (after killing off i386).

    > Getting a lot of down-votes for this... why are people so down on the idea?

    People mistake "downvote" for "disagree". You should only downvote a comment when it doesn't contribute anything to the discussion. If you disagree - you can argue, or just move on.

  8. > needs an external app for fractional display scaling

    Huh? I go to Settings -> Displays -> Advanced -> Show resolutions as list -> Show all resolutions -> you can literally pick *whatever* your screen will advertise?

    *Maybe* that's one or two clicks too many? Arguably you don't want non-technical users to accidentally set up blurry text.

  9. Tried it for a while, it was death by a thousand papercuts.

    I wanted the Konsole theme to stay in sync with system light/dark theme. I ended up writing a pair of .desktop files and a helper program to talk to DBus.

    I want to use my computer, not configure it.

  10. > soldered RAM

    Hold on a minute.

    It's not "soldered". It's integrated with the SoC. The benefit is memory latency and bandwidth.

    If you know Framework, their entire mission is to build upgradeable laptops, and they keep delivering. Now they also wanted to build an incredibly powerful, but small and quiet desktop. They went directly to AMD, asked their engineers to make the memory upgradeable. AMD worked really hard and said not possible, not unless you want all of these cores to sit idle.

    https://frame.work/blog/framework-desktop-deep-dive-ryzen-ai...

    The world has moved on. Just as you no longer have discrete cache chips or discrete FPUs, you can't do discrete memory anymore - unless you don't need that level of performance, in which case CAMM is still an excellent choice.

    But that's not what Apple does. M1 redefined the low-end. It will remain a great choice in 5 years, even when macOS kills it off - Asahi remains very decent.

  11. Anyone can recommend something viable for simple tasks? I don't need 32GB of VRAM, just a reliable machine for everyday tasks that's decent, lightweight, has a good battery.

    (I know I'm describing an M2 Air, but I'd like to explore alternatives.)

  12. Yep, bad law, I'd also say bad intent.

    Apple is ahead of the curve[1]. You get a system-level popup asking you for consent to be tracked. Actual, not implied consent - only "yes" means "yes".

    So you say "no" and it means "no". Apps are blocked from all basic forms of tracking (like device ID), and the App Store rules state that apps that try to circumvent that will be kicked out. Apple doesn't fuck around - they've kicked Meta and Epic without blinking an eye.

    EU's response? Kick Apple, because EU companies can no longer do targeted advertising on Apple's platform. Our regulators are full of shit.

    [1]: Well Apple still tracks you in their first-party apps, but that's a different story.

  13. We've had ad-hoc WiFi for about 3 decades, but that requires a level of device access that no gatekeeper will agree to anymore.
  14. A physical switch is extra BoM / cost, and doesn't make sense in the context of a networked device. Just make it LAN-first / LAN-only. Any Internet-enabled features should happen on the gateway, and be opt-in.
  15. Agree. I don't think Gemini plugs any hole that Gopher could've left open. As it is, it's just a motherfuckingwebsite.com, except it's trying to take itself seriously.
  16. Yep. Manufacturers / distributors should be held responsible. Aligning the incentives is half the battle.
  17. OK so it's like Minecraft, but with a lot more combat. I can see the appeal.

    > The most effective anticheat tool really is game design.

    Yep, that's always been my idea, and why I brought up Elo.

    IMO second most effective is to play with people you already trust. Or like on many public Factorio servers: strangers get limited permissions until proven trustworthy. But none of this works in a game with just a couple hundred players.

    Thanks for sharing.

  18. Yep. Everyone understands email, not everyone understands that email is federated, and yet everyone benefits from federation.
  19. As an occasional enjoyer of OS X 10.5 on PowerPC, I can recommend... iTunes. It is actually really decent, as is most of Jobs-era stuff.

    I don't have anything to play FLAC or Vorbis, but the machine has more urgent problems... <https://www.rollc.at/posts/2024-07-02-tibook/>

  20. Decoupled: <https://apps.apple.com/us/app/decoupled/id1382409837>

    100% offline-only. Open in Finder, drag&drop music, enjoy the untethered experience.

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