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File: 910410.png (376 KB, 1000x926)
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So, this shit is dead and captcha won't work anymore.
How are you supposed to use 4chan now?
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>>107713101
That's because you are a doxxed loser, who uses the same 4chan cookie for yars, so you get easier captchas.
For everyone else, the star captcha requires now to quickly tell whether its 5, 6 or seven pointed and it can be distorted.
>>
>>107701514
People around here claim to be high IQ all the time. Therefore they got a captcha fit for high IQ people. If you can't post here because of the captcha, then you're low IQ. (Allegedly)
That, or the jannies just decided to have a laugh to see how many people, who claim to be high IQ, fail at a moderately low IQ test.
(Now in all seriousness, this captcha is terrible)
>>
Importing all that JS garbage from 4chanX was a mistake, and so was the catalog. This site used to be fine before they added that trash, and then afterward you had to turn off JS to get a usable site again. Now you can't even post without JS. Just sad man, real fucking sad.
>>
The new captcha is easy and if you can't handle it, you have brain damage, and I don't want you on my board.
>>
#filter cancerposters
/(saa+r|izzat|do not redeem|benchod)/i;reason:indian spam
/(?=.*poo)(?=.*loo).*/i;reason:indian spam
/(?=.*shit)(?=.*street).*/i;reason:indian spam

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>Read the sticky: >>105076684

>GNU/Linux questions >>>/g/fglt
>Windows questions >>>/g/fwt
>PC building? >>>/g/pcbg
>Programming questions >>>/g/dpt
>Obsolete laptops >>/g/tpg
>Cheap electronics >>>/g/csg
>Server questions >>>/g/hsg
>Buying headphones >>>/g/hpg
>How to find/activate any version of Windows?
https://rentry.org/installwindows

Previous: >>107682448
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>>107719588
I don't know how but I do know back in the day my parents used to have multiple landline phones, they were the cordless kind that you dock into a small station and we had a couple of dock+phone combos distributed around the house so you could answer from anywhere. IIRC they were even sold as pair packs.
So while I don't remember how it was done I know that it was very normal and there's definitely a way to do it
>>
Did anyone know how to bypass Pixeldrain's limit?
>>
>>107719900
Easiest way is to login to your router and change your mac address, that'll give you a new IP. Then delete your cookies and reload pixeldrain.
Unless you have so static IP that it doesn't change then you would need to use something else. There is a pixeldrain proxy somewhere but I'm not sure if it works or not.
>>
>>107719900
Delete cookie & use VPN
>>
>>107717384
ok, thx

Discussion of use of local AI models with the ComfyUI visual programming language.

>UI
ComfyUI: https://github.com/comfyanonymous/ComfyUI

>Checkpoints, LoRAs, Upscalers, & Workflows
https://civitai.com
https://civitaiarchive.com/
https://openmodeldb.info
https://openart.ai/workflows

>Z Image Turbo
https://huggingface.co/Tongyi-MAI/Z-Image-Turbo
https://docs.comfy.org/tutorials/image/z-image/z-image-turbo


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Soon(TM)
>>
>>107719688
ew...
>>
>>107718227
bimp for visibility
>>
>>107719979
>>107719998
It's gonna be so funny when it's released and it's a total piece of shit that nobody can do anything with. No LoRAs will meaningfully transfer to turbo. Total copefest will ensue
>>
>>107720401
>It's gonna be so funny when it's released and it's a total piece of shit that nobody can do anything with.
I doubt base will be that bad, if they knew it's a piece of shit it would've been released already, the fact they are waiting for so long before releasing it means they know it has some huge potential

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Since the security updates stopping were such a big deal has anybody managed to find a major vulnerability or had one saved for the end of support? I mainly use debian and fedora now but a couple of my media still run Win 10 and I really don't want to set them up all over again. Is Windows 11 really safer when it seems to have more ports open to monitor activities and send telemetry back to the mothership as well as having new bugs seemingly every update.
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>>107718409
security updates don't matter if you are not retarded. Your computer is by default protected while sitting behind NAT or CGNAT. The rest is just the matter of not downloading sketchy executables from the internet (just like on up to doot windows). I literally daily-drive XP SP3 and never got hacked. Entire "muh security" is a fear-mongering tactic started by linux trannies to bully people into transitioning to troonix, which is unarguably even worse than Windows 11.
>>
>>107720128
this + simplewall
>>
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>>107720128
more like a microjeet tactic to make pepo install 11.
>>
>>107718409
Good morning maam!
>>
>>107718409
still gets security updates/ LTSC

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>What phone has X and Y feature?
Don't ask, use these!
https://www.gsmarena.com/search.php3
https://www.kimovil.com/en/compare-smartphones
https://phonedb.net/index.php?m=device&s=query

Good Resources:
>Reviews
https://www.gsmarena.com
https://www.phonearena.com
https://www.notebookcheck.net

>Frequency Checkers
https://www.frequencycheck.com
https://kimovil.com/en/frequency-checker

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>>107718967
>save the app as-is as keep it as a free to use program
Sure. Will it work the same? Maybe. Lots of apps query servers for info, it's not all handled on your phone. If your version is out of date it won't work. It depends what it is and how it works.
>>
>>107719796
[mirror for visibility]
>Samsung Xcover7 Pro
I'm having a hell of a time finding the differences between the model numbers: SM-G556B, SM-G556BU1, SM-G556B/DS

So far, I gather that U1 might be factory-unlocked. And "DS" might mean Dual Sim... but I thought one of the features of this model was the dual sim ... so do U1 and B not have dual sim? I am trying to find out, because I need to know which works best internationally yet I can still use in the US (w/ unlocked and dual sim). I'm not just buying for fun, this is a big deal purchase, so I need to make the right decision the first time.
>>
>>107719915
Oh I got the model numbers wrong, but similar endings, which seem to be the determing factor anyway
SM-G766B, SM-G766BU1, SM-G766B/DS
>>
>Homie tried to see me a Moto G Stylus 2025
>Told me it was unlocked
>He found out it was still locked to Cricket and the Cricket lady tried to jew me into getting a new line, said they'll unlock it in April
Is flashing phones still a thing?
>>
OnePlus won!!

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Brave shills been real quiet on this board ever since this drama happened
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>>
People refusing to pay for software is why most of it is full of ads and telemetry
>>
>>107718811
>Its opt in but you have to pay to remove it
???
>>
>>107719931
I wouldn't be so sure. even if people paid for it to have it not show ads, at least some of that would end up with ads, just like cable TV.
>>
i will just wait for someone to crack it with a registry edit or dll so i get brave premium for free
>>
>>107713389
I tried to switch to Helium, everything worked fine until I realized scrollbars keep disappearing for some reason.

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What's so special about Arch? Why does it get memed on so hard? People say it has bleeding edge packages but why is that so important? Is it better for gaming or something? What makes it different from Mint?
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>>107709451
Arch is nice. There's some odd shit like pacman telling me things will be installed before their dependancy, and I don't know why it's doing that or what that would do. (I always exit the update and update those dependancy's first). But overall I like the ecosystem and it just werks. I tried to use fedora for half a day and it instantely didn't have a package I was using on my desktop on arch. Found an appimage for an alternative and the program was broken. Decided to call it and head back to an arch based system.
>>107709764
>The free software philosophy
Is this when a distro only has 5 packages because everything else isn't using their autism licence?
>>
>>107710533
Good post
>>
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>>107718940
more like when a serious distro has maintained packages in their official repos and dont need to resort to malware infested user repo or shady scripts to get software.
>>
>>107719285
Meanwhile on Fedora:
>Requires a 3rd party repository in order for it be usable because the official repos it came with is even MORE barren than Arch Linux's official repos
Meanwhile on Ubuntu:
>Users resort to adding 3rd party PPAs to the list of their repositories which can contain malicious packages and break their system
>>
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Google locked me out of my gmail account for starting a twitter account and is asking me to verify by uploading my ID
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>>107713054
>Google locked me out of my gmail account
Time for the 'tard workout...
And stop and start and point and laugh!
Repeat.

Seriously, tho, have you learned your lesson yet?
That isn't your gmail account, screwgle just allow you to use it. That permission is optional.

>by uploading my ID
In what easily frauded format?

>>107713381
>just comply and show them the ID
And that, dipshit, is how this became a thing in the first place. People like you, with attitudes like that.

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>>107717212
You can no longer have a non-blacklisted e-mail account without revealing your identity one way or another, meaning any service that requires e-mail registration will inevitably be linked to your identity.
>>
>>107713384
A lot of sites don't accept weirdo email addresses.
>>
>>107718314
My time in this industry is short
Definitely past time to change paths
>>
>>107713054
>Google locked me out
you get what you fucking deserve

>The development comes a little over a year after the tech giant [Google] disclosed that its transition to Rust led to a decline in memory safety vulnerabilities from 223 in 2019 to less than 50 in 2024.

>The company pointed out that Rust code requires fewer revisions, necessitating about 20% fewer revisions than their C++ counterparts, and has contributed to a decreased rollback rate, thereby improving overall development throughput.

>We adopted Rust for its security and are seeing a 1000x reduction in memory safety vulnerability density compared to Android's C and C++ code. But the biggest surprise was Rust's impact on software delivery," Google's Jeff Vander Stoep said. "With Rust changes having a 4x lower rollback rate and spending 25% less time in code review, the safer path is now also the faster one

>With roughly 5 million lines of Rust in the Android platform and one potential memory safety vulnerability found (and fixed pre-release), our estimated vulnerability density for Rust is 0.2 vuln per 1 million lines (MLOC).

>Our historical data for C and C++ shows a density of closer to 1,000 memory safety vulnerabilities per MLOC. Our Rust code is currently tracking at a density orders of magnitude lower: a more than 1000x reduction.

https://thehackernews.com/2025/11/rust-adoption-drives-android-memory.html
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>>107710735
>I can write a babby tier control loop
Why are "embedded devs" so fucking painfully retarded? Is this why they're always paid well below market and can't even figure out how to use VCS?
>>
>>107717211
https://files.catbox.moe/hyn2wm

>>107717394
A Vec doesn't allocate until you write to it so on the mmap path it doesn't do anything. I define the variable in the top-level scope so it stays alive for long enough.
You could write this instead:
    let mut input_buf;
let input_map = unsafe { memmap2::Mmap::map(&io::stdin()) };
let input: &[u8] = if let Ok(input_map) = &input_map {
input_map
} else {
input_buf = Vec::new();
io::stdin().read_to_end(&mut input_buf)?;
&input_buf
};


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>>107719223
tidied up a and used writev instead of fwrite, a bit better now https://files.catbox.moe/fqehlc.c
happy new year
>>
>>107719970
Happy new year!
>tidied up a and used writev instead of fwrite, a bit better now
This one doesn't work for me, it gives EINVAL whenever a bucket has more than IOV_MAX=1024 vectors.
In the Rust code I don't make an iovec for each individual line, that was slower when I tried it. I allocate a big concatenated buffer per bucket in the parallelized section and then do a vectored write of those buffers.
The vectored write seemed to be just barely faster than one write per bucket but that's plausibly measurement noise. Being able to parallelize the buffering was a bigger deal.
>>
>>107720378
>it gives EINVAL whenever a bucket has more than IOV_MAX=1024 vectors
huh
I'll take a look later

Everyone mad at AI for RAM prices, soon we won't even be able to afford internet because all the fiber optics are gone.
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>>107720055
>so when the war is over
it will start again
will not be any different
will be exactly the same
>>
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>>107720216
>will not be any different
>will be exactly the same
You mean...
>>
>>107720055
armies are exempt from having to deal with pollution, CO2 budgets and all that pleb nonsense. they can do whatever the fuck they want.
also remember to take shorter showers and use paper straws
>>
>>107720360
>also remember to take shorter showers and use paper straws
and don't rape that young cute girl just because you can easily overpower her
>>
>>107720428
Imagine all that NTR that's going on, on both sides
Raping someones daughter or wife in front of her father or husband at gunpoint

Getting blown up by a drone sucks but sure worth it

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>US chip giant Nvidia announced Thursday that it would build a planned “multibillion-shekel” research and development campus in the northern town of Kiryat Tivon, bringing thousands of jobs to a region outside Haifa with designs of creating a tech hub.

Hmm
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>>107718568
Never underestimate the stupidity of midwits, they are the worst of both words. They lack the wisdom of down to earth blue collar workers while also not being intelligent enough to figure certain things out. It gets worse in tech workers, they get told they're smart all the time which makes them arrogant because they're not quite smart enough to understand that they aren't actually extremely intelligent, people only tell them that because tech work can be indecipherable to laymen.
>>
Israel are based Jews, they're far right. Not the people writing about "White Fragility" on news sites. Those are usually traitors protesting in FAVOUR of Palestinians.
>>
>>107718043
you americans were always jews, why are so many of you surprised? After all, look at your dick, its very small (<20cm) and you have also mutilated it by cutting a part of it for some degenerate reason.
>>
>>107718568
What makes you think he had a choice?
>>
>>107718043
Cost of doing business in the US. This is just a roundabout way to buy politicians in the US.

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>>107655260
Don't buy anything OTHER THAN IBM/Lenovo ThinkPad T, X, and W/P Series if you want the Real Business Experience™
>Other business laptops are welcome in /tpg/ (Dell Latitude/Precision, HP EliteBook/ZBook)

Why ThinkPad?
>Used machines are plentiful and cheap
>Excellent keyboards, tactile feel and quiet + the TrackPoint
>Great durability: magnesium roll cage for structural integrity, with high quality plastic body panels
>Utilitarian design: e.g. indicator LEDs, 7 row keyboard layout on older models
>Docking stations that easily turns your laptop into a desktop
>Easy to repair (most models), upgrade & maintain thanks to readily available service manuals for every model, spare parts easy & cheap to obtain
>Excellent Linux & *BSD support

ThinkWiki - General info about ThinkPads/specs
https://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/ThinkWiki

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>>107716788
Price?
Looks like a generic E series-tier laptop desu.
Also why does it have the numpad in some pics?
Are Ebay brownoids really this lazy?
>>
>>107700638
There was a attempt to crowdfund an ExpressCard to M2 SSD adapter specifically for thinkpads (the brand was Thinkmods), which might've been interesting to you, but I don't think they ever shipped anything IIRC. There are similar chink devices though.

The ExpressCard to M2 NVME will not have NVME speeds, due to the ExpressCard's speed limitations, which is about the same speed as SATA II. You get extra storage that's about the same speed as your regular SATA drive, but it's extra storage.
>>
>>107720006
Correction, on the X220/X230 you should get SATA III speeds. It's probably still a waste to slot an especially fast NVME in there
>>
Is there a tierlist or infographic for the best models for what prices? Just need it for cap cut video editing or PC replacement when im working outside of the house. Dont want to spend too much on it
>>
>>107716057
>24GB
40 GB works, but good luck getting a 32 GB stick for a reasonable price.

>>107716753
I would say no later than T14 G2. It's the last model that's remotely tolerable when switching from a T420 keyboard.

>>107719618
Ignore it. It's always lurking waiting for an opportunity to say
>>amd
>nope
The only reason to avoid AMD on this model is if you need a discrete GPU.

>>107718595
You can put any screen up to FHD. The hardest part is ungluing the bezel from the stock screen without damaging either.

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when do you think it will be socially acceptable and safe for NPCs to finally accept AI? what would need to happen for them to suddenly do a 180?
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>>107720108
>creating slop text isn't a real task
there's literally an entire world of corporate office pen-pushers that do exactly that while being paid a salary.
their entire work is about writing emails, making slides for their infinite meetings, designing a 100 and one internal corporate reports and slacking in the meantime.
all of this is what AI does effortlessly, it might even do it better than your usual corporate drone.

>>107720108
>claude chatgpt grok
all of these are shit after the release of Gemini 3 Pro. well, until one of them releases the next gen of AI models.
GLM-4.7 is a good competitor though, for now.
>>
>>107720194
no, their work is to be a flunky to the man. there's a specific man they suck up to. the man sucks up to another man all the way up to ceos.

if there are no flunkies, who the fuck's gonna sit through all that bullshit?
>all of these are shit after the release
literally all llms are the same since chatgpt came out. image generation improved. llms, not really.
>>
>>107720233
>their work is to be a flunky to the man.
we are talking about corporate headquarters that can take entire buildings, CEO don't care about entire floors of people and what they do as long as they look busy or prepare flashy reports, you only need to suck up if you need to get promotions and such. Otherwise, these people are getting paid for doing bullshit nevertheless. It's basically adult daycare at this point. With AI they could replace your usual Strategic Integration Division, Legacy Asset Management Office, Statutory Reporting & Governance Assurance Department etc.

>literally all llms are the same since chatgpt came out
then you are not using them enough to notice the difference.
the video that I've referenced here >>107720020 demonstrates clearly how much progress has been done in comparison to previous gen.
>>
>>107720311
>we are talking about corporate headquarters that can take entire buildings
yea and kings used to have palaces. there's a lot of flunkies, what can i say.
>then you are not using them enough to notice the difference.
o am well aware ai never sleeps. is there a video where an llm completes some sort of task? little crappy demo it stole off github isn't a use case. i try to get chatgpt to write the features i actually need, and it never fucking works. at best it can just suggest a framework, if the feature already was solved.
>>
>>107719987
nigga, try the new AI tool by google
The bot don't read the whole text, instead it do text search by making scripts. It can also do simple interactions with browser. With moore law o algo it won't be long before the bot could use the whole computer or phone

They still want $150 for one of these things, even after all these years.
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>>107720368
Just buy a cheap Casio you dolt they are a third of the price and just as good/better
>>
>>107720368
Specialization tools are expensive regardless of their cost, just because whoever has them can pay a shit ton for them.
>>
I've never found a usecase for these after school but I'm also not working in a stem field. Where do people actually use it?
>>
>>107720394
Why wouldn't I just download a random graphing app?
>>
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>>107720402
They were very useful (and expensive) if you lived 1970-1990 and worked a STEM field. Today? Just a cool piece of tech that is still practical for exams, really.

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https://flathub.org/en/year-in-review/2025
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>>107710195
is flatpak really needed if i have arch? is it better or soemthing
>>
>>107720196
Flatpaks are a distro-agnostic way to distribute packages with some additional sandboxing and Android-like permission controls. They're an option if something isn't in the Arch repos and you don't trust AUR.
>>
>>107720145
User error and/or made up story. (likely latter)
>>
Why should *I* do it, though?
>>
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>>107711910


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