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RadDevon RadDevon @lemmy.zip

Still figuring things out here. In the world, I mean.

  • 🏑 Personal site: https://devon.lol
  • 🐭 Previous Lemmy profile: https://lemmy.ml/u/RadDevon
  • 🦣 Mastodon: https://techhub.social/@RadDevon
  • πŸ“ˆ Tildes: https://tildes.net/user/RadDevon
Posts 4
Comments 38
Dealing with games that just won't run on Linux
  • Ah, that’s very helpful. Thanks!

    Do you virtualize or dual boot?

  • Dealing with games that just won't run on Linux
  • aside from leaving them behind

  • Dealing with games that just won't run on Linux

    How are people coping with games that just won't run on Linux (aside from leaving them behind)? Do you dual boot Windows? Virtualize? What's your strategy for this?

    This will be extremely rare for me since I don't play a lot of competitive stuff, but I'd love to find a solution. I have a large library, and it's bound to happen from time to time.

    58
    This farming sim sits at the bottom of your screen while you kid yourself you're doing other things
  • When I saw this, I thought it sounded really cool! That is, until I remembered that I literally never touch my Windows machine except for gaming, so, unless I’m going to try to play two games at once (spoiler: I’m not), I will unfortunately never have a use for this. πŸ˜…

  • How are slavery reparations fair?
  • Ending slavery doesn't reset everything back to zero. Imagine if you're running a race against someone else. The person officiating the race (no clue what this kind of person is called πŸ˜…) lets your opponent start running the race and keeps you back at the start line. Then, they have a moment of clarity and say to themselves, "Wait a second… This isn't fair!" So, they stop that person where they are, apologize to you, say they promise never to do it again, and blow the whistle so that you can both start the race.

    But wait! That person still ended up starting way ahead! But we already ended head starts before the race started so it's OK, right? Well, no, because the person who got the head start still got to start from their advantaged position.

    But this isn't quite the same because your issue crosses generations. So, a better analogy might be a relay race. Maybe the head start is stopped just as the second person on the opposing team receives the… thing you pass in a relay race. (Why am I making an analogy to a thing I know nothing about? πŸ˜…) They didn't personally get the head start. So, it's OK to go ahead and start the race now with one relay team already on their second runner while the other is on their first, right? It wouldn't be fair to punish that person who didn't directly gain the advantage of the head start.

    Well, no, because that team still got an advantage and the other team still started at a disadvantage. Reparations are less about punishing an individual and more about leveling a playing field.

  • Does anyone know if creating a content-"sharing" bot for Lemmy(, from reddit subs and elsewhere,) would be illegal ?
  • Sure! Here's one more thing I wish you would consider before you go forward with it: if you didn't get sued for doing this, it wouldn't be because you didn't break the law. It would be because the people whose rights you violated can't afford to sue (or maybe it's just that they don't have teams of lawyers scouring the internet to make sure all their rights are protected and haven't noticed as a result). If Reddit claimed ownership over all content posted on the platform, it would be no less illegal, but you'd get a cease-and-desist in a heartbeat, followed by a lawsuit if you didn't comply. Trying it only because the people whose rights you're violating can't protect themselves makes the whole thing feel like punching down.

    The justification I hear for this sort of activity is usually to damage Reddit in some way… but it's not actually Reddit that's being damaged. It's other people like all of us who ultimately have been used by Reddit for free labor for the last nearly two decades now. These bots are now victimizing them again in the interest of getting back at the entity who first victimized them… but that should really be their choice since it was their content. It just doesn't feel justified to me.

    Now if you wrote a script that a Reddit user could use that would grab all of their own Reddit posts, post them to an appropriate Lemmy community, and delete them from Reddit (not sure if deleting a Reddit post is even possible at this point πŸ˜…), and convinced a bunch of them to use it, that seems to me like the right approach. The users have full agency to decide whether or not their content gets moved, but you're making it easy for them to do the thing you want them to do.

    I'm no staunch defender of copyright, but it sucks that because access to the legal system is expensive, corporations like Reddit get the benefit of the law while regular people like you and me don't get that if we can't afford tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal bills. If we're going to have copyright law, it should definitely protect regular people who take the time to share things with others online for virtually no benefit to themselves just as much if not more than it does massive corporations.

  • Does anyone know if creating a content-"sharing" bot for Lemmy(, from reddit subs and elsewhere,) would be illegal ?
  • Not a lawyer, but I believe if you want to take content others have posted on Reddit and repost it here, you would violate their copyright on that content. You would want to get their consent before you post it here or else the instance you post them to could start getting DMCA requests and could ultimately be sued. I’m guessing you could also be sued for writing the software that violated the copyright.

    It’s not likely to happen but it could. My concern would be less about what ill effects you and/or Lemmy might incur and more around the ethics of taking content belonging to other social media users and reposting it without their permission. Reddit TOS says users retain copyright on their content, so it’s other users’ rights you’re violating in doing so.

    Now if you’re talking about a bot that reposts only content you have posted on Reddit, you’re probably in the clear.

  • Defederation Results
  • I've been impressed with the thoughtful and careful way the team handled this. I decided to set up a regular donation on Open Collective as a result. I moved from Lemmy.ml a couple of months back, and this has proven to be a very well-managed instance. Kudos to all! πŸ™

  • Annoucement: Upcoming vote on defederation
  • If we defederate now, is it possible/does it make sense to re-federate with those instances when the moderation tools have matured?

  • A look at search engines with their own indexes
  • Ha ha! Just noticed that you are the author, seemingly. If that's the case, thank you for the awesome resource!

  • A look at search engines with their own indexes
  • I love this and check back in on it from time to time since the author does a pretty good job keeping it updated.

  • What was your first videogame that made you say "Ok, I need to play this game properly: I need to upgrade my specs"?
  • It was Quake, but I didn't have the money to actually make it happen. That would come years later.

  • What movies are worth rewatching?
  • I pick up something new almost every time I watch Memento.

  • Where did all this reddit hatred come from?
  • Reddit can't be divorced from the leadership. If you hate the direction leadership is taking Reddit, how can you still like Reddit itself? What is it apart from that?

    This argument makes more sense to me with Lemmy. Yes, if you hate the direction one instance admin is taking their Lemmy instance, it doesn't make sense to hate Lemmy as a whole… but Reddit has only one "instance," so if you hate the "admin," you hate Reddit.

  • Why do most US lawsuits settle instead of going to trial?
  • In my experience, I've come across a factor that I don't think has been mentioned here. When a lawsuit goes to trial, that means a judge has to do work. When a lawsuit settle, other people are doing the work. (Some) judges don't want to work, so they will do everything they can to force you out of your courtroom into the waiting arms of mediators who will charge you hundreds of dollars an hour to try to settle the case. Surfing the internet is more fun than working, and part of the privilege of being a judge is that you can force people to stop making you work.

  • How do you choose an instance and does that have a significant effect on your Lemmy experience?
  • Lemmy.world seems to be frequently under attack

    You've seen for yourself that it does have a significant effect. You may not want the largest instance because that paints a big target on you. You also need to pick an instance with admins you can trust, or at least reconcile yourself to jumping ship to another instance if they do the wrong thing.

    I started on lemmy.ml about a year before the reddit exodus. It was fine, and I didn't use it much because there wasn't much activity. I started using Lemmy more heavily when everyone came over… but at the same time, performance at lemmy.ml became horrible. They also disabled community creation because "(they) have enough communities." What does that even mean? I still haven't created any communities, but I would like to be able to if I choose to.

    I ended up jumping ship to another instance I'm happy with so far… but I almost went to vlemmy first, which no longer exists. That would have had an affect on my experience.

    If I were evaluating an instance today, I would start by scrolling to the bottom of the page to see what version they're on. Is it the latest? That means the admins are engaged at least enough to keep the software updated. If not, you should probably move on. Are they on a pre-release version? If so, are you comfortable with a little instability to have bleeding edge features and fixes? Then, I would just poke around a little to see how performance is on the instance before creating an account. Is it acceptable? Read the server sidebar. Are you OK with the rules? Last, I would find the support or "meta" community for the instance. See what kinds of discussions are happening there. Are the mods and admins active and are they philosophically aligned with you? Are problems being fixed? What are the big announcements? Does the way the server is being managed make sense to you?

  • Why do most gaming laptops have vents on the bottom?
  • Ah, that's a good point. Hadn't thought of it.

  • Why do most gaming laptops have vents on the bottom?
  • It's a 2023 Lenovo Legion 7i. I'm not aware of a feature like this on it, but maybe I just haven't discovered it yet.

  • Why do most gaming laptops have vents on the bottom?

    If you're using the laptop as intended (i.e., on your lap), wouldn't those be almost entirely blocked?

    64
    OldWeb @lemmy.ml RadDevon @lemmy.zip
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