All good - theyre still funny :) . just because they’re AI doesn’t make them bad
Splendid4117
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- 18 Comments
The watermark in the lower right of each image is the Gemini watermark. Definitely AI
I have disappointing news for you: https://www.sciencenordic.com/agriculture-animals-climate/disappointed-scientists-damn-kangaroos-fart-methane/1371658
Splendid4117@piefed.socialto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•If not Github, where would you host your projects?English
7·3 months agoNote - you can completely disable all the AI features in Gitlab. In fact, they’re disabled by default unless you explicitly enable them by configuring model integrations. I think its one of the better self hosted options because it had a clear maintenance and path to profitability.
I run my own GitLab on a NUC with no issues.
Disclaimer: I have contributed open source code to GitLab before.
Splendid4117@piefed.socialto
Programming@programming.dev•If not Github, where would you host your projects?English
16·3 months agoNote - you can completely disable all the AI features in Gitlab. In fact, they’re disabled by default unless you explicitly enable them by configuring model integrations. I think its one of the better self hosted options because it had a clear maintenance and path to profitability.
I run my own GitLab on a NUC with no issues.
Disclaimer: I have contributed open source code to GitLab before.
Splendid4117@piefed.socialto
News@lemmy.world•EPA approves sale of higher ethanol fuel to try to lower gas pricesEnglish
109·3 months agoPlus, higher ethanol content in fuel reduces its energy density, so while this will certainly reduce prices, it will make people buy gas more often. Meaning… Not a great fix.
Splendid4117@piefed.socialto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Gamers’ Worst Nightmares About AI Are Coming TrueEnglish
31·4 months agoThis is equivalent to saying ‘guns don’t kill people, people kill people’ which is a way of implying you shouldn’t regulate the tool. The tool matters, and how its positioned and what it’s given access to do matters.
Splendid4117@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Redox OS has adopted a Certificate of Origin policy and a strict no-LLM policyEnglish
6·4 months agoPlus, speaking as an OSS maintainer for some rather large libraries… Its obvious. You can also just close MRs and if the user comments and engages in meaningful discussion you reopen. Cost of a wrong decision is low.
Splendid4117@piefed.socialto
Tech@programming.dev•GitHub will begin charging for self-hosted action runners on March 2026English
2·6 months agoYep, just clariftying what that means in terms of open source too, which i know folks here care about
Splendid4117@piefed.socialto
Tech@programming.dev•GitHub will begin charging for self-hosted action runners on March 2026English
4·6 months agoThere are two editions of Gitlab - community edition (completely open source) and enterprise edition (closed source additions). You can run CE completely free. You can actually run EE completely free too, there are just some features disabled
Can you let us know what happens when you connect the keyboard? Also potentially the model of the keyboard.
Its Walmart canada (based on the sign in the background) so 99.99 is the MSRP based on Nintendo.ca. that’s a little over 70 USD
Splendid4117@piefed.socialto
A Boring Dystopia@lemmy.world•They even do Price Discrimination on video games nowEnglish
19·8 months agoAs a cloud engineer - renting any distribution servers from a cloud provider will result in a dev paying for every download. You pay based on the bandwidth you consume in the cloud (I.e., you pay per Gb delivered) as opposed to your pipeline like you do when you run your own private servers. You also pay storage costs per month. You’d have to maintain that “forever” as well, because people would want to uninstall, then re-install later.
I get your argument, and I’m not discounting it, but I do suspect that for smaller devs the price they’re paying to Valve is well earned on Valve’s side (and the fact that so many devs choose to use it would seem to bear this out). We should also consider that steam is essentially built-in DRM to games.
For larger customers, they likely have this infrastructure and get annoyed at the costs. They still go to Steam though because it increases their reach as a type of marketing strategy, so they still likely find the cut worth while. If Steam was more hostile to users, then people would actively look for alternatives (I.e., the Gogs of the world), and the publishers would have to target more storefronts.
So yes, Steam’s primary customers are publishers, but I’m not sure they’re really getting the raw end of the deal here :)
I think it’s more that a ton of popular python libraries (things like pandas, tensor, etc) are actually built in C, so python is just C wearing a mask
Splendid4117@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.zip•X's new 'encrypted' XChat feature seems no more secure than the failure that came before itEnglish
7·1 year agoIt sounds like this isn’t E2EE based on the article - there has been no papers published, and the verbiage in privacy agreements still states Twitter can decrypt your messages as needed. That indicates this is functionally similar to the old messages.
Splendid4117@piefed.socialto
Steam Hardware@sopuli.xyz•Steam Deck gets a Battery Charge Limit control in the latest BetaEnglish
8·1 year agoNot quite - batteries have something called self-discharge, which happens faster at higher temps. If you’re actively using the deck, it can get warm which speeds up this process. It’s not fast, but it’s absolutely possible to see depending on how long you leave the deck docked
Splendid4117@piefed.socialto
Android@lemdro.id•Exclusive: Google will develop the Android OS fully in private, and here's whyEnglish
5·1 year agoGoogle is still planning on giving them the code; that’s in the article





Unfortunately I can verify this is real. This is now required for people who use google voice - you will get a pop up saying it’s required for calling and messaging