Dreaming_Novaling

joined 11 months ago
[–] Dreaming_Novaling@lemmy.zip 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

As the other comment said, keycards are just a way to "activate" the game, you only need internet to download the game on initial load. So for now it's fine.

But it'll be a problem if you're stuck somewhere without internet, or if Nintendo cuts support 10+ years later and you can't activate any second-hand cartridges since they no longer have the servers up to download from.

[–] Dreaming_Novaling@lemmy.zip 12 points 1 month ago

Splatoon 2 Octo Expansion has an NPC that looks like these little guys in the Deepsea Metro!

[–] Dreaming_Novaling@lemmy.zip 9 points 1 month ago

Yeah, I think if it's more about policing the misinformation influencers spread, then I can calm down a bit, although it still makes me nervous to think about the government picking and choosing what a person with a crowd can say.

For now, it's making sure influencers don't spread anti-vax bullshit, but what if tomorrow it's no talking about Palestine?

Even then, medical professionals themselves can fall to propaganda and spread lies, so we can't use a single person as an arbiter of truth.

[–] Dreaming_Novaling@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 month ago

Man, I have to stop reading so I don't continue a stream of tears in the middle of a lobby, but I felt every single word of that article in my bones.

I couldn't ever imagine hanging myself or shooting myself, that shit sounds terrifying as hell. But for years now I've had those same exact "what if I just fell down the stairs and broke my neck" or "what if I got hit by a car and died on the site?" thoughts. And similarly, I think of how much of a hassle it'd be for my family, worrying about their wellbeing, my cats, the games and stories I'd never get to see, the places I want to go.

It's hard. I went to therapy for a year and found it useful even if it didn't do much or "fix" me, but I never admitted to her about these thoughts. I think the closest I got to it was talking about being tired often, and crying, but never just outright "I don't want to wake up tomorrow."

[–] Dreaming_Novaling@lemmy.zip 28 points 1 month ago (3 children)

If you don't need traffic data, CoMaps (uses OpenStreet Map data).

If you do need traffic data (understandable) Magic Earth is what I use. It's unfortunately not fully open source, only the map data is from OSM, but I find the navigation good 95% of the time, sometimes you have to make your own judgement for if a route might have bad traffic. At least it's not Google or Apple, and no ads.

I don't do car play, so I have no idea about how that works.

I wish we had better alternatives ~~or that cars all exploded and we went to public transport and walkable cities~~

[–] Dreaming_Novaling@lemmy.zip 5 points 2 months ago

Awful everything. At least Japanese people are protesting against Trump.

Like yay, Japan still likes us and I might be able to study abroad. But on the other hand, they've got a "women should be traditional" nutcase who thinks Trump is cool. Like nooooo. Stop. I'd rather you hate us.

[–] Dreaming_Novaling@lemmy.zip 3 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Very valid and true point, but that requires companies to openly admit that they've made their devices to not work if it can't phone home, and no company is gonna do that. At best, they'll tell you it needs internet access, but even then they'll probably downplay it.

Either that or some poor sacrifice will have to be the guinea pig and buy the thing to test it and tell others. Ah, I guess Consumer Reports could do that at least.

[–] Dreaming_Novaling@lemmy.zip 38 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Sorry Mico, you gotta go

[–] Dreaming_Novaling@lemmy.zip 24 points 2 months ago

Once I finish college I'm nuking my Windows partition. Won't even boot into it on any future laptop, will just nuke it fully. I'm just waiting now cause I don't wanna have to fight with teachers over online test software and shit, I like being able to do easy at home exams.

But I will relish the day I walk across the stage. It'll be gone that night.

[–] Dreaming_Novaling@lemmy.zip 5 points 2 months ago (1 children)

So, in the US, a standalone, bare-minimum with ads included Disney+ subscription costs $9.99. Oops, actually we're raising it to $11.99 TOMORROW! So after a paying for a year of Dinsey's cheapest plan, you'd have paid $144.

But maybe Disney isn't your thing? Well. Netflix costs $7.99 for the ad plan, and $17.99 for the no ads plan. But do note, even on the ad supported plan, you STILL can't watch everything.

Ad-supported, all mobile games and most movies and TV shows are available. A lock icon will appear on unavailable titles.

Ranges $96-216 per year for ads or no ads.

Like anime? Crunchyroll offers a $7.99 plan, but it might not have all the content, so then there's the $11.99 plan. So $96-144 per year. But their catalog doesn't even have every fucking anime, and they've let dubbing go to the wayside after buying out their main competitor, Funimation (in which we lost several anime due to licensing).

Listen to music on top of that? Spotify for non-students ($5.99) costs $11.99, so $144 in a year. YT music is $10.99 for non-students, so $132

So say you listen to Spotify, like anime, and watch Netflix, you're paying at minimum $336 per year, on the cheapest plans available, which usually have ads or missing features.

I've been looking at Optiplex and Lenovo ThinkCentres on ebay recently, and for my bare minimum standards of 1. Can support virtualization, 2. Can do Intel quick sync video and encode HEVC 10-bit (So about 10 year old devices) the prices range around $90-$150. Some 2TB HDDs would be about $100. You'd probably be pirating since most of the new shows on streaming services have no physical media to buy/no way of just owning a movie or TV box set. Even then, outright buying music and movies is cheaper in the long run. Anything you already own can be added to your library. You'll never be told that "oops we didn't pay to re-up our access to that movie, so it's gone!" You'll never have new ads, paywalled features, limited devices, or other bullshit. The server is up whenever you want it to be, provided you can handle being tech support.

So in the end, a home server + drives costs less than paying for several services where you own shit, and they can cut features or raise the price any day. But yes, we're just being conceited assholes.

[–] Dreaming_Novaling@lemmy.zip 3 points 2 months ago

Mother nature is an amazing comedian

[–] Dreaming_Novaling@lemmy.zip 3 points 2 months ago

Yeah no, sometimes you need screen sharing in the "chatting app"

A lot of university clubs are on Discord, and my cyber club does tutorials and labs on the weekends where the leader screen-shares. It's nice because you can see the video in real time and ask questions whenever, rather than watching a pre-recorded video and having to hope you have no issues while following along.

I mean, this is literally why Zoom blew up so much during COVID. Real-time learning works more than asynchronous learning for a lot of people.

 

Hello, I've been saying it to myself for a year now, but I'm on summer break rn and I really need to do something with my life. Here's some of the software I plan to host. Goal is to not spend more than $150-200, I do have some gift cards though.

Absolutely Will Run:

Nextcloud & Immich - I want to replace Google and OneDrive

Might do in the near future:

Jellyfin - my mom and I usually just bootleg by using Kodi on our FireTV, so not a major need rn, but might be nice for future purposes.

piHole - better overall ad blocking, so I don't have to use nextDNS on all my devices, and maybe help my mom out.

VPN - I currently pay for Proton, and we use it on the FireTV, the TV app sucks cause it doesn't have killswitch (PC and mobile have Killswitch). I have several devices and profiles that I use, so I was thinking maybe just an overall VPN might be nice

Seeding - I think it would be nice to give back to the community, since I torrent every now and then.

OS Plan: I plan to use Proxmox as I have a little bit of experience using it, and others seem to like it a lot for managing multiple software.

I know I don't need to go full power mode rn, so I wanna stick with something low end that I could maybe upgrade in the future. Should I just buy a used laptop/PC, or get like an Optiplex or ThinkServer? I don't wanna rack up my parent's electric bill. I already got some hard drives a year ago, so but is using an external drive bad?

I know to use the Ethernet ports so my signal isn't shit, but I gotta work out the best spot I can put my server. I do know an okay amount of networking knowledge, and I'm a cyber student anyway so this is like a fun yet educational personal project for me.

When it comes to external access and security of these services, should I stick with Tailscale? Some people have concerns over the proprietary bits and are using headscale instead I guess.

Any guidance is much appreciated!

EDIT: Thank you all so much for the guidance! I've decided to repurpose an old Mac laptop that has a broken screen and use that as the proxmox base (might put better RAM in it if I can) and then start with that. I might get a Pi or thin client in the future for more purposes. I will certainly come back to post when my nextcloud is running!

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