@worldsendless @lupyuen I don't use CI/CD personally but skimming the docs seems to indicate that it currently doesn't
There appears to be external way of doing it
https://itnext.io/explore-gitea-drone-ci-cd-on-k3s-4a9e99f8b938
@lupyuen Yes universe I get hint, maybe I should seriously look into https://gitea.io/en-us/
Especially since they are working on federation if I recall correctly
Facial Recognition Smartwatches to be used to monitor foreign offenders in UK
@niclas @blacklight @thisisthebreath @carbonatedcaffeine @lupyuen that's using Mediatek 800 as stated on the page. I'm not sure what the current status for mainlining the SoC is (let alone the device) but my educated guess is - not even close.
I don't have anything against Planet Computers but be prepared to be stuck with what they release. Usually distro builds with their BSP kernel.
It's not bad per-se and I'm sure the k-b is awesome. There are limitations to be aware of tho
@lupyuen This is interesting because it is a down to earth statement that they really tried and realized that the user base for legal transactions is small. Additionally the amount of problems they encountered for so few transactions is mindblowing.
So still no use case for crypto.
"We've recently decided to stop accepting Cryptocurrency payments (again) and I wanted to share some of the issues we encountered"
https://blog.shodan.io/accepting-crypto-a-vendor-perspective/
Love to have a keyboard again...and eyeing this one; https://store.planetcom.co.uk/products/astro-slide (a tad pricey)
Had a chance to "feel it" at Embedded World a few weeks ago, and feels very solid.
Apparently running Ubuntu (boss in booth said that) or Android...so should be possible to get a proper FOSS working.
Hacked crypto startup Nomad offers a 10% bounty for return of funds after $190 million attack
@silmathoron @blacklight @lupyuen It will continue to improve 😉
PP has a few limitations that can't be circumvented but it's still very capable device.
Compiling directly on PPP would be a massive improvement though. Can't overstate how important this is for experimentation.
The parts that really are way behind everything else would be videos and photos for all Linux phones. It will get better but I don't think the PP can handle video capture as things are at the moment
Amazon acquires iRobot for $1.7 billion
https://gizmodo.com/amazon-acquires-roomba-maker-irobot-for-1-7-billion-1849375668
Singapore's tallest Skyscraper to be built by Alibaba and local partners
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/business/singapore-tallest-building-alibaba-perennial-axa-tower-guoco-2860921?cid=internal_sharetool_androidphone_05082022_cna
@thisisthebreath @carbonatedcaffeine @lupyuen I used to have an N800 too, and even an ancient N770, but those two devices already failed badly a couple of years ago because of inexplicable hardware issues. So far the N900 has really stood the test of time though.
@thisisthebreath @carbonatedcaffeine @lupyuen my #N900 with #PostmarketOS is still doing a decent job as a pocket-sized SSH client - especially useful to control media on my Raspberry Pis when I'm around the house, or for small system administration tasks.
Besides that, and occasionally showing it off to some geek friends (or maybe use it as a small in-house server), I struggled to find many practical uses - I may have really stretched its lifetime more than the NASA team did with the Voyager probes.
Another problem I have is with PostmarketOS. It's built around Busybox and OpenRC instead of the GNU environment + systemd. It means that most of my existing configuration files, services etc. won't work without modifications. This is something I hoped Ubuntu Touch could fix, but Ubuntu Touch eventually preferred to follow the path of the locked+containerized school that made the tinkering experience worse. Since I loved Maemo a decade ago, I could give Leste a try, but I also have my concerns about a project still based on Debian oldstable that is likely to ship software that is at least a couple of years old...
@blacklight @takloufer @lupyuen Its rough, of course, but I daily drive the PinePhonePro and enjoy it immensely. Arch linux has been solid, easy to setup, and both calls and bluetooth work, though things crash occasionally.
#Blockly works on Mobile Web Browsers too
https://github.com/lupyuen3/blockly-zig-nuttx#blockly-on-mobile
@takloufer @lupyuen I also don't mind using old hardware, but it depends on the purpose. I have plenty of RPi0 around my house doing a lot of heavy duty, but when it comes to my primary phone I'd like to have something that I can use with recent software without having to wait several seconds for the screen to refresh or for an app to start.
And of course the price (or, better, the price/performance ratio) is another factor. The #Pinephone Pro is $600 at retail price for a phone that ships two ARM Cortex A72 cores. Sure, they're faster than the ancient A53, but you're still spending $600 in 2022 on a device that ships a chipset that was released in 2016. This is a problem that also plagues other libre-friendly phone makers though - the prices of #Fairphone and #Librem are also comparable to those of several mid-to-high range phones today, while shipping less than half of their performance.
This is a kind of negative feedback loop that has plagued the whole field of libre devices. You can't use the newest flashy hardware if you want your devices to only include open hardware. And you can't produce devices at a competitive price until you do it at scale and your supply chains are well oiled. But you can't produce devices at scale until you have built a decent user base. And you can't build a decent user base if the price of your devices is higher than what they can deliver when compared to the rest of the market. And even the most enthusiastic FLOSS developers (a category that probably includes myself) would not invest their money and time in something that is overpriced and underperforming.
@thisisthebreath @lupyuen
Yeah, there's a QT webbrowser on Maemo Leste and theres a good few light ones on PostmarketOS too.
@thisisthebreath @lupyuen
Maemo leste is super cool, since it's still Maemo but it has newer software like the linux kernel.
IoT Techie and Educator / Apache NuttX PMC