Skip Navigation
david David Emerson @lemmy.sdf.org

I am a person and I do person things.

Posts 2
Comments 13
Keyboards with built-in media control knobs?
  • Keebio has a bunch of options on their keyboards for arbitrarily bindable rotary encoders... this is super handy for media control. https://keeb.io

  • [META] What are the demographics of this community?
  • Millennial here. I used computers from a very young age, and when my near-continuous use became untenable, my parents got me my own: first computer was a Macintosh IIfx, then a Sun Ultra 1, then a Power Mac G4 (the stripes on the front, handles, don't remember exact model name). Everything after the G4 has been less exciting, even if it's all more powerful. Not sure if this is because I've gotten older or if the gear has gotten less fun.

  • Unicomp again?
  • I would consider these: https://www.modelfkeyboards.com/ instead, if you're the kind of person who really uses something for 25 years at a time. You won't care about the cost amortized over that period, and the build quality is really much higher. Unicomp is not bad, but Model F Labs is simply higher.

    Alternatively, look at whatever other keyboard you want to try in a modern layout (Keebio has some amazing kits) and get a super tactile switch, like a Kailh Box Jade or Box Navy. It's true that Cherry MX aren't always amazing, but also, the keyswitch world is a rich place if you want to experiment, and many switch types are every bit as accurate as buckling spring. Naturally, they'll have a different feel, the buckling spring is really an outlier, but a good switch doesn't double or anything really off by default.

  • GAS67 How To: Thocky, Poppy, or Whisper Quiet: What sound profile are you looking for your keyboard?
  • Bone stock Kailh Jades here on all my current keyboards, and I love them. SA keycaps on everything.

  • OpenBSD on the Desktop
  • This is very true re: desktop utilization patterns.

  • OpenBSD on the Desktop
  • You bring up another good point that I haven't considered - signal! Man, why isn't there a signal client? I almost want to make this a side project now.

  • OpenBSD on the Desktop
  • I've found sysupgrade to be pretty good at the core OS, but I have definitely had issues with drivers (particularly audio and display) and third party packages installed through pkg_add. Upgrading seems to be a mixed bag in terms of continuity of function when you're running a richer system, as a workstation often is. On a server, with minimal package surface area, things are just fine.

  • What Do You Use SDF For?
  • Exploring! SDF is like the coalition of servers I ran in college with friends and campus friendlies. A little of it was explicitly practical, some of it unstable, all of it educational and fun and sometimes stuff took off. I love that SDF survives, and I love that they have paying members.

    When new or esoteric stuff hits, whether it's 9front or the latest fedi service, SDF is where to see if it makes sense for you. Sure there's home labs, but a home lab doesn't have the community around it that we have here on SDF, which means it doesn't give you the sense of how a service runs at scale or in the (sometimes positive, sometimes corrupting, but always informative) presence of others.

  • Your email is not meeting standards.
  • Do you know for sure you're on it? Might just be the recent registration time of the subdomain... some mailservers are especially unenthusiastic about novel domain names, even subdomains, and then when they've seen enough mail from them in circulation they calm down a bit.

  • Your email is not meeting standards.
  • Yeah, there's a few things going on here with the ones I've received so far -

    • no dmarc for the subdomain (lemmy.sdf)
    • no spf record for the source (205.166.94.11)
    • no dkim

    I'm sure it's early times, but this'll end up in the spam folders of a ton of mail services with the header as it stands today.

  • OpenBSD on the Desktop

    This is an OS which has everything. It's clean, it's simple, it has a helpful community, stable code, and even pretty good package counts to support nearly any desktop/workstation activity.

    And yet, I feel like there are nagging issues which ultimately affect all non-mainstream1 OSes. Display driver complications, janky system upgrades, a lack of groupware clients. I'm not picking on OpenBSD, I love the distro and I think it should succeed in this particular area (the desktop/workstation) where other open source alternatives have failed, but why hasn't anybody managed to make it happen yet?

    For a while, there was a similar hope around DragonflyBSD in the FreeBSD community, but I don't know where that ended up... I do know I see nobody really using it.

    What's it going to take?

    1Obviously, I mean MacOS and Windows, since Linux is at least as hampered on the desktop, perhaps moreso on account of the poor community and scattered vision.

    17
    Community Structure?
  • Cool, wasn't sure if there were rules or anything around this. I guess as long as folks stay civil it doesn't much matter. It's pleasant that that's more or less the norm in whole swaths of the fediverse here.

  • Community Structure?

    What are we thinking in terms of the hierarchy here? Multiple communities on this instance, or just one community and consolidate into posts for topics?

    6
    Hello world! - Please introduce yourself here
  • That license plate though!