

I’ve really been mulling one of those over with 128GB. I’m on Claude Max and Cerebras $50 so I’m using a good amount of $200/mo for coding and Openclaw. Is it worth it for light coding, or are you only doing SD with it?


I’ve really been mulling one of those over with 128GB. I’m on Claude Max and Cerebras $50 so I’m using a good amount of $200/mo for coding and Openclaw. Is it worth it for light coding, or are you only doing SD with it?


This was the channel I was going to suggest. A lot of what he shows is pretty pricey, but some would make sense if you weren’t too concerned about speed.


Framework desktop?
I mean, there’s a bridge right there. Hang a pedestrian walkway underneath. Plenty of bridges like that where it’s been added after the fact.
But we know, it’ll see roughly 12 people a year actually use it because they’re Americans.


Lol. OK, that’s why that stuck in my brain. Thanks!


There was some sort of Jellyfin/Plex ersatz “TV channel” thing that Chris Fisher on Linux Unplugged was talking about. Can’t remember what the name was.


It has to be 20 years since I just went full pirate. Maybe 25.
Now we’re conflating ADHD with holiness.
OK.


Who could have seen this coming?


Month after they’ll need a semen sample and hat size.
And people will do it.


TheresANameIHaventHeardInAWhile.jpg
I would use their LXC install, it’s much more flexible. It does not need to be local but it does simplify things like email. I had to put a bit of effort into getting it to be able to connect to IMAP mailboxes to process, but it wasn’t any more than just asking it to get the necessary libraries etc. But things like that are why using it as an LXC is a better choice. It might be able to do that as a docker, but there’s potential problems with network connectivity and docker in docker issues.
You can also firewall that LXC off without having to mess up your own workstation, as well as snapshot it and back it up.
And the first thing I would do is have it keep token budgets when you build tasks, and report it’s token use to you every hour or two. It takes some time to learn how to structure reminders and task processing to not create loops that eat up scads of tokens. Don’t ask me how I know.
But holy hell, can it be useful.


Possibly. I can’t say I’ve ever tried to add Plasma to vanilla Ubuntu, other than trying out Kubuntu every once in a while when I try to put a new linux user on something, I’ve been off Ubuntu for well over a decade.


IDK what is up with Kubuntu, but it always has show-stopping bugs when I use it. I think it’s the reason everyone thinks Plasma is buggy. Any other distro seems to work fine with Plasma.
zfs.rent
I set up Pulse recently and the ease of setup and great UI/UX is impressive. Really liking it.
Of course, there’s some AI bullshit if you want to opt in, but it’s not enabled by default.


Pretty much every vegetable that my parents cooked into slime, instead of semi-crisp. Brocolli, beets and brussel sprouts especially. Plus, apparently, steak doesn’t need to be the texture of shoe leather. Whoda thunk.


It’s going to depend on how the application you’re using decides to invoke the dialog. That’s the filter they decided to pass to it. Take it up with Librewolf, or fork the project and patch it for your own use.


I honestly had someone on HN trying to say it could replace ESX now that VMware has gone full retard. Like, wtf
Thanks for the feedback. That was precisely my worry about outlaying that money and not being happy with the result.