Could #KDEConnectSMS or its GNOME equivalent be made to work as a #libpurple plugin for #Pidgin? I do like how Pidgin allows me to have my Matrix, IRC, Whatsapp, and Telegram all together, and it would really ice the cake to have access to my text messages there too.
@celestialchik obligatory xkcd: xkcd.com/2241
@realcaseyrollins yeah this is the stuff. There's also a seasonal "breakfast" dark which I aim to try this winter if I can get my hands on it.
Brewdog isn't bad but they definitely cater to people who prefer hops over malt. The most recent variety pack I got from them consists of:
- Nanny State, a "hoppy ale";
- Punk AF, an IPA;
- Hazy AF, a hazy IPA; and
- Elvis AF, a grapefruit IPA.
They offer a decent coffee stout by the name of Wake Up Call but they don't really promote it and it's not easy to find.
Which Athletic flavours do you prefer?
Our favourite non-alcoholic beers @realcaseyrollins
Coconut on the left is my gf's, oatmeal on the right is mine
@skyblond I remember reading about something similar in a pay-per-view TV context (or maybe it was streaming?). The publisher had a bunch of interns find links to bootleg streams, and then the publisher flashed a unique code on each subscriber's feed. The interns took screenshots of the streams they were watching and the publisher cross-referenced the codes to find out who was uploading the content. It wasn't difficult to see the codes, but the uploaders generally didn't know what they were or react in time to prevent their identifying code from being broadcast.
One thing I'm missing is the ability to control individual frames. Does anyone have a #recommendation for an extension that restores the frame commands (reload, show only this, open in new tab) to a modern version of #Firefox?
@freeschool you're talking to the wrong guy. I'm just a mod, which means my job is dealing with reports and removing content that violates our rules. Eugen is the author of the Mastodon software, and he's explicitly rejected[1] full text search in the past.
There was some technical work[2] done by glitch-soc to implement this but it doesn't seem to have reached production readiness. If the problems with that implementation get sorted out, freemo might be able to apply the same patches against QOTO's codebase.
1: github.com/mastodon/mastodon/issues/594
2: github.com/glitch-soc/mastodon/pull/1502
@realcaseyrollins they exist but they're pricey. For instance the Panasonic UBT1GL has the features you want
@thewk You can't prevent him from altering the HTML, but if he doesn't know what to alter it to, you can at least verify whether it has been altered.
For example, your server evaluates the answers submitted, and decides that the score was 68. It gives a results page saying:
User = Alice Cheatypants
Score = 68
Verification Code = 51ef2c256b08
Internally it calculates the verification code by concatenating "Alice Cheatypants" + "68" + "my_super_secret_password" and performing some cryptographic hash. As long as "my_super_secret_password" never leaves your server, the user can't know what the hash should be for "Alice Cheatypants" + "100" + "my_super_secret_password". So if the user edits the HTML so it says "100", you can compute what the hash should have been, note the mismatch, and flag the screenshot as invalid. And because it has the username as part of the plaintext, Alice can't just ask Bob what his verification code was, then edit her score and code to match his.
Note that this means the scoring of the test has to be done server-side. If you allow the user to tell you his *score* rather than his *answers* you completely negate the benefits because he can just tell the server to give him the code matching a higher score.
@peterdrake I'll toss in a recommendation for Xeonjia. It's a top-down RPG in the style of old Pokemon games, but the gimmick is that many floors are frictionless, so you can only change direction once you hit the far wall. Most walls hurt if you crash into them, so you have to plan your route carefully to minimise how much damage you take.
It is straightforward at first, but as the environments get more complicated, the number of possible paths undergoes combinatorial explosion, and you really have to think it through instead of attempting to solve the problem through trial and error.
https://gitlab.com/deepdaikon/Xeonjia
@trinsec @jalefkowit@octodon.social
@valleyforge It's not the greatest thing in the world for the engine's longevity, either. Going on a trip with a bike of similar vintage to mine but air-cooled would make me pretty nervous.
@tek_dmn no, the other host is some embedded thing which might be Linux-based, actually (there's a copy of the GPL in the printed manual, but no indication what it applies to). It can read files as a USB host, but not as a network client. Even so, per manufacturer support, it can only read NTFS and FAT.
It probably would've been worth buying another external disk so I could just copy everything once and be done with it, but it seems like a waste to buy a whole 'nother 8TB to only use it one time.
@RL_Dane I'm doing the hokey pokey with partitions on an HDD tonight and I feel your pain, the system is completely bogged down under heavy I/O load.
Requirement is to grant an external host access to an HDD which holds various large files. It's fairly full at 8TB and the files are in the hundreds-of-megabytes range. Problem is, it's been formatted ext4 all its life and the external host speaks only NTFS and can't be taught anything else (pretty locked down system). So the workflow is:
Shrink the ext4 partition to leave as much free space as possible trailing it
Grow the NTFS partition to fill the free space
Copy as many files as will fit in the expanded partition
Verify copy integrity
Delete copied files from the ext4 partition to free up space
Repeat
"You put some NTFS in, you take some ext4 out, you copy some files over and you shake em all about"
Luckily my largest file is smaller than the available free space so it's *possible* at least, it just takes ages and makes everything run like molasses
@realcaseyrollins double the N, not T: Cin cin nati not cin ci natti
Just 'cause I don't think hashtagging a misspelling will get you very far ;)
@RL_Dane like blocks incoming stuff on the federated timeline, or just locally? We keep QOTO pretty clean locally, but the idea is for users to decide which instances they want to block. We've only blocked three domains at the instance level, and that for circumventing user-level measures. Sort of a good-neighbour policy: be conservative in what we send and liberal in what we accept.
17k users so seems to be about there you want it.
Nominally it's a science focussed instance but as long as you're not going crazy on flat earth, antivax, evolution denial, etc., it's pretty generalist in practice.