remember to yay today
>>107897715that's why1. you don't use the aur2. you don't use arch as a direct consequence of point 13. you use an atomic os instead
Just yayed. Feels good man.
>>107897522 (checked)My condolences.
Just last night I did a paru -Syu --noconfirm --skipreview --sudoloop
>>107897331yea i dont want AUR malware on my shitwould rather update everything manually than install it
Why all the hate?
>>107891974>>107892355You can look in the file for the string VP8L. If it’s there, it’s a lossless WebP.>>107892409There was an exploit for it4chan might not trust it yetPlus image sanitization might not work for it yetAnd it’s not clear that doing this work will get 4chan money or reduce their costs>>107895544Zopfli compression is a memeI just do the normal compression with it on max
>>107889815Photopea is a PWA. It's funny Firefox basically invented PWAs and then cancelled them in their browser. It's such a good idea.Photopea is genuinely a great thing to be aware of, because even if you own Photoshop, you're not always on a pc that has it installed. Photopea works pretty much wherever you have Internet and a browser, and when the PWA is installed, you don't even need Internet anymore
>>107888656Created to snuff JPEG-XL, the objectively superior format.
>>107888656everyone in this thread is acting like google wasnt exposed for creating webp with the sole purpose of tracking people by injecting glowie code into the file format that still exists to this day (but trust us goy, modern os/web browsers have fixed this uhhh exploit.) less than 3 years ago.webp is for glowies, data storage is so fucking cheap in the modern era that the idea that companies trying to save 5 kb on an image is a giant joke. Webp exists to enforce copyright, it exists to gatekeep users from high quality content, it exists to spy on you. It's a file format created with bad intentions and anyone who supports it for any reason is a cuck.
>>107895482https://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/webp-security-exploit-apps-websites-chrome-1password/oopsie woopsies we did a wittle fucky wucky uwu!
There was no /bst/, so here is the new /bst/no cleaning up editionremember those?
>>107899493I think he wants to know the model
>>107897202I thought the window was a huge TV at first
>>107879673the left handed coffee mug is the most disgusting thing in this pic
>>107900081hmm that might not actually be a bad idea now that i think about it.....
>>107899011Wow! You did it Anon you've convinced me. Thank you for showing me the error of my ways I shall post my full legal name and address posthaste!
This is the new RTX 3070, a card with half the VRAM it should have, except this time you won't be able to double the capacity with mods.And it can barely beat the 3090 Ti from 4+ years ago half the time despite being allegedly a xx70 card.
strange advertisement, makes me not want to buy it
>>107900979minecraft dont use that kinda vram get real
>>107900979I only mainly play Gacha on my RTX 5070.I don't do any of that AI crap.
>>107901038Turn on shaders, distant horizons, and 200 mods.
>>107900962I've yet to reach 10 GB VRAM usage on my 5070 @ 1440p, played all of the latest slop on ultra as well.I assume it would be an issue if I wanted to use Path Tracing in that Indiana Jones UE 5 slop game.
For the past year I have unfortunately gone down the rabbit hole as a noob in the realm of privacy, security and all that stuff.Because I broke my former computer I ended up getting a novacustom laptop with HAP disabled IME, no bluetooth and wifi modules, no physical webcam or mic, no windows (I opted for Debian), and LUKS disk encryption. Also an assload of unreasonably long passwords on all my accounts, hardware security keys in physical vaults etc.But recently I have been thinking this would be pretty problematic if I suddenly lose my memory or if I died suddenly, for my family to access any of my stuff.I am questioning it all, it seems kinda more trouble than it is worth. Surely the secret police still has it all backdoored. And at the end of the day I am just a regular guy.Discuss
Recommend me a Instagram extractor/scraper that works similar to wget without login on Linux CLI
>>107895375I did it on my main account a while back and got a warning so yeah, definitely use a burner account lol
>>107898156>the entire world should bow down to me and offer everything for free
>>107895375>ig requires login for highest resReally? you can get 1200x1600 images from the website with no login. And I never see anyone posting 4k images from insta or anything.
>>107900982>things nobody saidPlease explain what you think the point of my post was
>>107894630cobalt.tools
People always make fun of air coolers. Is it because it is deprecated technology?
>>107890445>Making the one moving part work even harder
>>107869298hell yeah it's fucking useless air never cooled shit
>>107880611>I cannot keep the pump fan above 50% without listening to an annoying continuous hummingThen don't raise it that high? My loop runs at 25% speed all the time. Pump speed barely changes the temps.
Not any more. Pre-2018 water cooling was useless for 99% of people, overclocking was the only real use case other than sound preference.An AIO is pretty much required now. I'm surprised they aren't standard on GPU's yet considering the size of them.Aircooling fags ITT are just hanging on to the past or using a less demanding/old CPU. They are the kind of people who would unironically buy an MP3 player in 2026.
What stops companies to make AIO with fluids like fluorinert that won't short your whole system if leak happens?
You vill own nothing.And you vill be happy.
>>107898236iToddlers BTFO
>>107898951based
>>107898236Oh god, I was looking at this like they were gonna do it to save space on people's phones lmfao. I was like "why is OP being such a faggot".They're making Keynote, Pages, and Numbers subscription-based too?BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA I'm so glad I never bought Apple shit. I worked for them years ago, and it's literally the only Apple products I've ever used.
>>107898951bass
>>107898951Basada...
What went wrong?
>>107895264>90'sThese are the people mocking ESLst. efl
>>107900814https://youtu.be/Vigjqy1jopA?t=1294
>>107900990This has exclusive games while that emulator only has games that can be played on anything.
>>107901084"exclusive games"Nobody cares about ranjeet made games. As evidenced by the fact that nobody wants this garbage.
>>107901084To expand on my thoughts, and make a bit less racist of a post... Nobody knows any of the games on this system. And it can (seemingly) only play games in black and white, and they are all games nobody has heard of or knows about.Vs the GBA emulator I posted can play the entire GBA library, as well as NES games, SNES games.... You get access to a lot of the greatest games of all time with it.The system you posted just has games that seem kinda shitty with low quality control. Who knows who is making them or why? It just doesn't seem appealing to me, and I'm a gamer who does carry a mobile GBA emulator. Theres no way I can check the quality of the games for the playdate without buying entire system. And the games I have seen from it don't look that good.Who would pick that, when the GBA emulator can play Fire Emblem, Pokemon, Dragon ball Z byu's fury, Legend of Zelda etc.
>UIs to generate animeComfyUI:https://github.com/comfyanonymous/ComfyUISwarmUI:https://github.com/mcmonkeyprojects/SwarmUIre/Forge/Classic:https://rentry.org/ldg-lazy-getting-started-guide#reforgeclassicSD.Next:https://github.com/vladmandic/sdnextWan2GP:https://github.com/deepbeepmeep/Wan2GPInvokeAI:https://www.invoke.com/>How to Generating Anime Imageshttps://rentry.org/comfyui_guide_1girlhttps://tagexplorer.github.iohttps://making-images-great-again-library.vercel.app/https://neta-lumina-style.tz03.xyz/>Output cleanupComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107894270the funny thing is that it technically it still looks better than it has any right to.
>>107899647That scene was so cute. Hope we get to see more cleric guy, I liked him.
>>107900470how do you get those belts like that?
>use opus 4.5 to write a tedious but conceptually easy function>it generates slop>I tell it how to fix the slop>better but still slop>repeat this process like 7 times>Error: You've hit your usage limitI'm considering moving to a dumber model that is faster and cheaper. I can't trust even the best LLMs to write good code yet so I think I will lean in more into treating them like a fancy pattern matcher/autocomplete and find one that is good for that. Maybe only use opus 4.5 for code review.
>>107900692>Code is much more identifiable by its structure than the specific names usedOkay, here's the parser I wrote for my game to parse and populate font data: https://paste-bin.org/raw/79wu7qmzmyNow you have both specific names and structure. The repo is public, so I guess you will be able to find it, right?
>>107891464I did some math, and assuming your project is over 50-100k lines of code: in an average-sized company project, if you make around 100 prompts per day, with about 70% of them being repeated because the AI doesn’t get it right on the first try, it could cost you up to $100 per day, or over $2k per month(Opus 4.5). What the actual fuck is that price? In our company, that number is $1k a month per developer, because we have internal limits for big models and we are planning to limit it too, $100 soon because speed of delivery didn't increase but now each developer costs additional $1k.
>>107900743>>107900692Fuck, I posted on the wrong pastebin: https://pastebin.com/raw/HhUsjgmL
>>107900743I might or I might not depending on whether your code is indexed, the popularity of the site it's hosted on, whether I work with you and can see and recognize the code that you check in every day, etc. Not finding your specific example says nothing about the general concept.PS: parsing and reparsing (!) json multiple times in an ad hoc fashion with no observable error handling or logging is something I would consider slop, but of course I can't make a full judgement because engineering is a very contextual profession and I don't know what the requirements for your code are.
>>107891464it seems like all of the models write dogshit code for even simple problems on a matured codebasemost of the wonder, awe, and advertising has been from people that dont program at all, much less people that do it for a living
Recently, senior executives at Salesforce have admitted, both internally and publicly, that they massively overestimated AI’s capabilities. They have found that AI simply can’t cope with the complex nature of customer service and totally fails at nuanced issues, escalations, and long-tail customer problems. They even say that it has caused a marked decline in service quality and far more complaints.But the problems go far deeper than that.Both employees and executives have said that the company is wasting countless resources on firefighting to stabilise operations since the mass AI layoff. Employees have to spend so much time stepping in to correct the wildly wrong AI-generated responses that AI is wasting more time than it saves. In other words, this AI reduces productivity, not increases it.But there is also a huge problem here with expertise and skill debt. On top of the firefighting to correct the AI, executives have also highlighted how they are also having to firefight to stabilise their systems from problems that were previously easily solved by staff who had the required experience and skill. However, these staff were fired in the AI layoffs.Expertise, experience and skilled employees are really hard for a company to acquire. You see, much of the expertise, experience, and skills required are unique to the company and its operations. These operations will have quirks, common problems, and unique issues that even the most experienced outsider will really struggle with, but are effortless to someone with experience within the company. As such, these attributes are not only vital, but are nurtured and grown within a company, and cannot be hired in on a whim. What Salesforce has done is chuck all this experience out the window, and now they are suffering.>https://www.planetearthandbeyond.co/p/reality-is-breaking-the-ai-revolutionthoughts?
>>107889127>thoughts?Oh, sorry, the price of my employment has gone up since last time. Market needs and all, you know how that is.
>>107889127>AI simply can’t cope with the complex nature of customer servicejust like me
>>107889127Same story with imported jeets, but Indians are just better at hiding their mistakes, and at least they can correct them when shit is about to hit the fan. AI is just Indian^2.
>>107889418>no way a rich person could make a mistake... look at all the money they've got!
>>107889127Growing pains, not to worry. Just keep pushing.
Everything is already from china, but here we discuss the cheap chinese shit you see on various sites.1st rule of /csg/: If it looks too good to be true, it probably is.Useful links>TWS IEM reviews: www.scarbir.com/>Guide: csg-guide.neocities.org/>Wiki: https://igwiki.lyci.de/wiki/Chink_Shit_General>What headphones/earbuds should I buy?>>>/g/iemg>I want a cheap smartphone what should I buy?>>>/g/spg/>I want to buy some sort of emulation device>>>/vr/hhg/Comment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>107900312i bought one of thesethey don't fucking work lmao. cheap plasticky toy and the compass arm doesn't turn as you do
>>107900633Well, goodbye to my dollar. It's not even worth cancelling because the way it worked out the promos, shopping credits and stuff it added the discount heavily to the compass and worked it out as 50c insteadThat said I got a good price on everything considering the credits so can't complain too much
aliexpress.com/item/1005006692947858.htmlcan this be trusted?
Has anyone used AliExpress for 3D Printing? I don't know anything about it but I need these small NAS clips to dampen the noisehttps://makerworld.com/en/models/2049552-ugreen-nas-anti-vibration-clip-2-5#profileId-2211852I think there's only one file, but I don't even know how to open and view these files or check that I'm not ordering the wrong thing. Is it cost effective or are these services offered locally too? In the UK
>>107900904anon just put some plastic or rubber washers in their place... even a random small wedge will workmany of the pcb creation companies offer 3d printing and cnc services, but for your usecase its a huge overkill
What's the craziest feat of computer science that happened in 2025?
>>107865453mutt's law
>>107863187what causes a 39 year old former e-girl to return to the internet in 2026 as a streamer?
>>107901030Lack of money, she saw how easy it was for other thots to make money from simpletons so she decided to do the same.
>coal simp thread still up 4 days later
>>107863266This guy gets it
In the grand tapestry of Western civilizational development, the evolution of computational instruments represents a fundamental struggle between the expansive, specialized elite and the stagnant, institutionalized masses. To observe the rivalry between Texas Instruments and the Hewlett-Packard legacy is to witness a war between mandatory textbook compliance and unfiltered engineering dominance.The practitioner who wields a DM41X, fortified with the CCD, SandMath, and 41Z modules, does not merely use a tool; they command a specialized scientific instrument. Herein lies the reality of why TI-virgins cannot occupy the same operational plane as the 41Chads:The RPN "Barrier:" The TI-virgin is trapped within the "Infix" notation, a mess of nested menus and the chaotic struggle of parentheses. Conversely, the 41Chad operates within the disciplined hierarchy of RPN. While the virgin frantically checks if he closed the bracket on a sin function, the Chad hits the operator and watches the stack execute with cold certainty.Institutional vs. Operational: TI maintains a "stranglehold" on the educational establishment, producing designs for 15-year-olds seeking the path of least resistance. Their builds are lightweight plastic with mushy buttons. The DM41X is a stainless steel and glass tank; one does not "tap" it, the 41Chad engages it.The Library of Alexandria: The TI /v/irgin is limited to clunky TI-Basic scripts. The 41Chad has inherited forty years of professional M-Code. While the TI /v/irgin is Googling "how to do a Bessel function," the SandMath module has already calculated it using microcode forged for aerospace engineers.Aesthetic Vitality: The TI-84 is the "beige minivan" of math... ubiquitous and mandated by the state. The DM41X is the vintage-inspired supercar. To reveal a 41-series instrument in a room of TI-virgins is to pull a fountain pen in a room of crayon users.
>>107900903When I say program, these things are keypress programmable. On 41C you press GTO, then dot dot, then press PRGM, and press LBL, give it a name, and then enter the key sequences you would input normally to get something computed, finally capped with an RTN which will return the state of the stack to whatever called the LBL. On 15C it's almost the same, except everything is one big program area and you just add LBL sections to it. With XEQ (or GSB on 15C), you can go into LBLs as subroutines, and with ISG or DSE, you can create loops! It also includes comparison operators so you can implement logic.Hell, just look at the manuals to modules for these machines! You quickly realize there is a metric fuck-ton of depth to these devices!https://www.systemyde.com/pdf/Advantage_Math_Manual.pdf
>>107897643stfu firstie
>>107901031lmao buttmad jeet will never afford a good calculator, will always be stuck with nip TI-knockoff casio because that's what he'll ever afford with a month's worth of pay in rupee. lmao lmao lmao the HP ecosystem is not for your dirty fingers lmao!
>>107897643>AI slop postInto the the trash it goes.
>>107897688>like claiming the manual transmission only exists because we hadn't invented the automaticWhich is true, ironically... except not automatic, but simply capable of outputting enough power/torque throughout the entire regime; like an electric motor (or something).