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It's not that I'm old and don't want to try using new tools but each time I try to use the new tool that my teammate likes to use, that tool also forces me to accept new cookies and subscribe to newsletter emails and surveys etc. 😭 I just want to work with her!

At this point I'm going to note the product key, set aside 100GB or so for a Windows partition and give up on this idea.

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So far my impression from using Windows for a few hours to try and set up dual booting (in case my kids want to eventually use this gaming PC to play some Windows-only games) is that Windows feels aggressively user-hostile at this point.

Maybe that's just always how it's been (I remember having to constantly tweak a bunch of stuff whenever I booted up a new machine), but wow does it feel gross after several years using Linux exclusively.

Looks like you also can't enable Full Disk Encryption unless your device meets certain standards? WTF, Windows? There is no way that this PC I have doesn't have enough hardware to do FDE.

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Heads up everyone using my approach to measuring Python code coverage as detailed in hynek.me/articles/ditch-codeco – GitHub rolled out v4 of upload-artifact that breaks a shitton of workflows including that one.

Do NOT update actions/upload-artifact for Coverage to v4. I have added a warning to the top of the blog post and I will try to come up with a new solution.

Unfortunately, that’s ANOTHER tone-deaf move by GitHub introducing community-wide breakage & I hope they’ll see reason & help migrate.

Presumably the Microsoft account is to manage authentication so that you get the same character every time you connect (no matter what IP they come from), and so that the custom servers can manage permissions and access.

Kinda fair, though also I imagine most people would be perfectly happy with each user generating a UUID and access being managed with an optional TOFU model where admins are asked when someone tries to join a server.

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Oh, also apparently you need a Microsoft account to connect to even *custom* Minecraft servers, and you need to pay for a Nintendo Online account AND have a Microsoft account to connect to Minecraft servers on the Switch.

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Haven't interacted with a product in a long, long time, then my son got really into and I bought a Windows computer. So far I've found:

1. Not only is internet required to install Windows, *you also need a Microsoft account*¹.
2. The Switch, Xbox and PS4/PS5 versions of Minecraft can only connect to "featured" servers rather than custom servers.²

Not a good track record for like... 1 week of interacting with their products.

¹I realize that there's some convoluted way to do this, but it definitely derailed me from doing the Windows install when I wanted to. Particularly since I'm just dual-booting Windows as a "just-in-case" type situation.
²Luckily someone has [hacked around this requirement](github.com/Pugmatt/BedrockConn), though who knows how long that can last.

@jotaemei I don't know what double meaning you could be referring to. ChatGPT is pretty convinced that this phrase might be used jokingly or metaphorically, but it doesn't offer up any specific double meaning... 😅

Now, I'm not an expert in , but I think this may mean something slightly different than what says it does...

I wrote a little post about pipx's new experimental script support: iscinumpy.dev/post/pep723/

You can now have a single Python file that declares its dependencies, and run it via pipx run! #python #pipx

Turing turing.com/ is a really scummy company. After all those "our AI thinks you'd like this" spam emails didn't work, now they've somehow found my private phone number and texted me spam about their product. This is the first time I've every had a company do this, and it's just disgusting. #TuringCompany #Spam

@weebull Power supply seems like one of the cheaper things to upgrade (though maybe not one of the physically easiest ones, considering that it plugs into everything 😛

@tomnardi I think I figured out why my blinkers weren't waking it up — there's a step-up transformer between the USB output and the blinker switch, and I think the step-up needs to have enough power to run it before the input impedance depends on the impedance across the outputs.

I think if the blinkers ran on 5.5V natively this would be no problem.

The solutions I see to this are:

1. Use a DPDT switch instead of the SPDT switch that's in there now, and with the second pole connected to a resistor across the 5.5V outputs. I don't mind pulling an extra 50mA or whatever for the time the blinker is on, but if you want to get fancy you can probably have this connected to a simple circuit that spikes the impedance when first turned on, then turns off.

2. Add a battery or capacitor to the input of the step-up that is sufficient to power the circuit when the battery pack is off, and where the quiescent current of the step-up would take 3-7 days to discharge the cap. That way any time you turn on the blinker, the circuit draws current and the battery pack wakes up (and recharges the capacitor).

I'm probably going to look for another solution that involves either pulling power from the bike itself or adding a drill battery or something, but I think the capacitor thing would probably work if I was really married to the battery pack solution.

OK, for a while I've been thinking I'd like access to a GPU to do some local jobs. Probably don't need to train a bunch of models from scratch, but I can imagine wanting to do some fine-tuning.

Right now I use Whisper on CPU and image generators like Stable Diffusion via pre-existing endpoints. I can imagine in the future my heaviest use will be image generators like SDXL and text-to-speech, and possibly I'd want to use them for high quality speech-to-text workflows as well.

I've got [this small media server](pcpartpicker.com/user/pineappl) that has a free PCiE slot, anyone know if I can just throw something like [this](pcpartpicker.com/product/4DkH9) in there and call it a day?

@tomnardi What does that mean to trigger a load, though? The blinkers themselves draw current, so if all that is required is to have a circuit that would draw power, they should be waking up the device.

If I understand what the 555 circuit is doing correctly, I think it's keeping the battery pack awake — which is a much easier task, because the battery pack is active and you just need to draw enough current for it to not go to sleep.

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