@jonn i mostly find modern games (the ones i can play on #linux ∧ the ones i care to try) boring compared to #cataclysmdda & #dwarffortress...
but i'd higly recommend «hard west» (the collerctor's edition is 3,49$)
and i might give a try to «mainframe defenders» (0,69$ right now).
p.s. filtered, sorted:
You can grab #ActionSupercross and #ElastoMania as a bundle from #Gog too.
Here's an interview with the creator of the legendary game:
https://spillhistorie.no/interview-with-balazs-rozsa-action-supercross-elasto-mania/
#Gog has a pretty huge sale going on.
@hydroponictrash @rudi yeah, I found that low-power laptops are perfect label printer servers for warehouses (staff can connect them to wifi themselves and they'll call home with a reverse ssh tunnel, I can even use the webcam to see the results!)
Considered buying a stack of Samsung Exynos chromebooks for €50, since I already had one running ArchLinuxARM and it's almost operational. Then I accidentally installed a new kernel on it while experimenting and now it's bricked.
So yeah I got them an HP Stream.
After some time I’ve found a way to upcycle Chromebooks to run the latest version of Ubuntu and boot to an external USB drive while maintaining the ChromeOS. The WiFi chips in these models also can create their own wifi networks so they can be short range routers.
What does this actually mean? Instead of requiring new hardware like a raspberry pi, we can take old Chromebooks that schools get rid of in the thousands and actually reuse them to create portable micro servers. Pack them full of offline books, maps, wikis, etc.
There is a major upside compared to using an old Chromebook over a raspberry pi, mainly that it's actually cheaper and can be free depending on how you source your chromebooks. I got 10 at $30 each which is cheaper than a pi or a pi alternative.
The battery life is also insane. I used it for close to 12 hours and it didn't even hit 50% battery loss. They also take very little time to charge so I'm interested to see how much power they might take up while attached to the off grid solar array.
So the plan is to make the docs and work some more on making these into portable offgrid information stations and packing them with info. https://anarchosolarpunk.substack.com/p/offgridserveruses
#solarpunk #permacomputing
I can't decide on colors here - blue or pink? 😊
Spring is everywhere - and I want to show it in this print - warm and cosy days, calm and peace. 🌿
So given this dire news, surely we are well on our way to cutting our carbon emissions, no?
No.
The synthesis report is crystal clear: we are not doing nearly enough to avoid dangerous impacts, let alone achieve the targets of the Paris Agreement.
The more I think about it, the more it doesn't add up.
I think his account may have been hacked, even though he *is* russian. Maybe he's sending a message out like this that he's in trouble and is forced to do some random things?..
It just doesn't add up. A person with IQ more than 30 can't do such idiotic stuff.
I was thinking "where did I see this fucker"?.. Turns out that he contributed pretty good patches to FP Elixir libraries which are a pillar of our Elixir usage.
https://github.com/florius0?tab=repositories
So annoying when people who looked cool turn out to be putin supporters (or russia supporters, which is the same thing in case someone wonders).
@jonn a Mozilla-specific API https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Add-ons/WebExtensions/API/webRequest/filterResponseData
For Chrome I'll probably need to inject a wrapper for fetch() into the document and do some back-and-forth with the background script. Certainly doable, but more work.
@jonn well, that's why I'm mitming the API (which hopefully doesn't change much) instead of trying to inject stuff into the website (which is probably harder anyway since it's all webpack-ed and not very accessible).
The downside is that I can't split up the context request into two separate ones, so i'll have to track who you follow and since when and assume your server has their contexts in full already. Until then opening any remote toot is slow.
Which doesn't bother me personally but that's cause my own instance is slow anyway (and I start the remote context request in parallel to the original one).
👀 https://www.jordanmechner.com/books/journals/
Also, the author of Prince of Persia is on Mastodon!
Played #PrinceOfPersia for the first time today. It's an absolutely stellar game that was way ahead of its time.
Also, a regular reminder that @textfiles is awesome. Donate to @internetarchive.
That https://doma.dev guy
#lean #elixir #typescript #react #nix
In my non-existent free time I design and run #TTRPG
If you use tools made by genocide-apologists, you are a genocide-apologist.
#lemmy users aren't welcome here.