andrew0

joined 2 years ago
[–] andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

I have a friend who set up a Dreame L10s Ultra. I helped them solder the breakout board, and was there when they flashed the new firmware. Relatively straight forward! Just follow the guide on the website and you should be good.

The robot is now accessible only on the local network, and they got it working in Home Assistant. The only feature that is missing now is direct camera view, which the original robot had. Basically, you could get a live feed of the robot's camers at any time. Looked fun, but it was not necessary.

[–] andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 35 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (10 children)

This article just screams rage-bait. Not that I am against making people aware of this kind of privacy invasion, but the authors did not bother to do any fact checking.

Firstly, they mention that the vacuum was "transmitting logs and telemetry that [the guy] had never consented to share". If you set up an app with the robot vacuum company, I'm pretty sure you'll get a rather long terms and services document that you just skip past, because who bothers reading that?

Secondly, the ADB part is rather weird. The person probably tried to install Valetudo on it? Otherwise, I have no clue what they tried to say with "reprinting the devices’ circuit boards". I doubt that this guy was able to reverse engineer an entire circuit board, but was surprised when seeing that ADB is enabled? This is what makes some devices rather straight forward to install custom firmware that block all the cloud shenanigans, so I'm not sure why they're painting this as a horrifying thing. Of course, you're broadcasting your map data to the manufacturer so that you can use their shitty app.

The part saying that it had full root access and a kill-switch is a bit worse, but still... It doesn't have to be like this. Shout-out to the people working on the Valetudo project. If you're interested in getting a privacy-friendly robot vacuum, have a look at their website. It requires some know-how, but once it's done, you know for sure you don't need to worry about a 3rd party spying on you.

[–] andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 21 points 2 months ago

Right, but then rich people can no longer exploit other regions if everyone is considered equal! Think about the shareholders for a bit :/ (I'm sarcastic, in case it is not clear :D)

The main problem here is that people flocking to positions of power are often the ones that do it for the wrong reasons. Until that part is sorted out, we will keep having leaders that will enforce things that are best for them and their closest ones. Some form of anarcho-communism would probably help this, but the current globalisation effort will make it very hard to implement. The best thing we can do as individuals is to just improve our social circle, and try to rely on as many local things as possible.

[–] andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 64 points 2 months ago (3 children)

Even the comic-book bullies are better than this... The sad part is that the West will continue to lick the boot, hoping everyone will just forget. I really hope that that is not the case. What Greta did here is very impressive, and I hope that her spirit will inspire other young people to vote out these dumbfucks in government that try to do damage control in this situation.

[–] andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 24 points 2 months ago (1 children)

The propaganda machine goes brr on both sides. However, the side you're advocating for decided that the only way to resolve a diplomatic issue is to invade a country and murder its citizens. No matter how you spin it, it is still the case that the powerful are throwing away human lives for their own benefit. Isn't .ml supposed to side with the people usually, and not the rich people controlling the world currently?

[–] andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 56 points 4 months ago (5 children)

Tesla's bang for buck is horrible. You get a shitty car made from the worst plastic possible, and on top of that they don't even have good quality control. The only thing that differentiated Tesla from the competition previously was the battery technology, but they no longer have that edge nowadays.

The Norwegians are probably getting them because they got used to it, and probably don't want to rely on Chinese cars. Beats me why they would select a Tesla nowadays over the European brands.

[–] andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 50 points 4 months ago

At the same time, we will give better access for American products in our market.

Yeah, that's a no from me. I will continue to boycott anything that is American, except for things that really have no alternative. Hopefully more people feel the same and cut off the money flow to Amerikkka.

[–] andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 5 months ago

Be wary that their docs are so and so. Nanonets OCR, Mistral OCR and MinerU will also extract formulas and images.

One other model I forgot to mention is Docling. This one is quite quick to set up in a docker container, and will have a web interface ready to go where you can upload documents. This sort of follows the PaddleOCR pipeline, but also allows you to use vLMs.

Good luck!

[–] andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 5 months ago (2 children)

If you find that OCR doesn't get you very far, maybe try a small vLM to parse PNGs of the pages. For example, Nanonets OCR will do this, although quite slow if you don't have a GPU. It will give you a Markdown version of the page, which you can then translate with another tool.

PaddleOCR might also be useful, since it focuses on Chinese, but it's more difficult to set up. To add to this, some other options are MinerU and MistralOCR (this is paid, but you can test it for free if you upload it in Mistral's library).

[–] andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 119 points 5 months ago (5 children)

Sure, if all politicians make all their data available to the public. Their phone chat messages, photos taken, everything.

No...? Then don't bring it up ever again. Initiatives like these will only make it look like you're a villain if you want privacy.

[–] andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 6 months ago

All the ones I mentioned can be installed with pip or uv if I am not mistaken. It would probably be more finicky than containers that you can put behind a reverse proxy, but it is possible if you wish to go that route. Ollama will also run system-wide, so any project will be able to use its API without you having to create a separate environment and download the same model twice in order to use it.

[–] andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 17 points 6 months ago (4 children)

Ollama for API, which you can integrate into Open WebUI. You can also integrate image generation with ComfyUI I believe.

It's less of a hassle to use Docker for Open WebUI, but ollama works as a regular CLI tool.

 

Previously used link: https://archive.ph/ICJZZ

Link to petition

Until now, the EU has allowed a majority of countries to rely on American big tech companies for communication and storage of sensitive data. For example, many universities across Europe rely on Google or Microsoft for email services, research data storage, and department communication. Similarly, many of them write their research using Microsoft Word, which could be used by these big companies to train their own AI models.

A majority of regular citizens rely on Meta for instant messaging apps (WhatsApp), Facebook, Instagram, but also on X (formerly Twitter), and TikTok. None of these apps are properly regulated even with EU's efforts, leaving people unshielded to other states' attempts at polarization. There is also the problem of mass profiling of users, which is used to supply targeted advertisements and sometimes influence public opinion on certain topics (cough Musk tweaking the Twitter algorithm to promote AfD cough).

The article that I supplied focuses mainly on the aspect of maintaining data privacy when our data is harvested by outside entities. However, this is, in my opinion, a horrible approach. We need to move everything ASAP to open source alternatives, and preferably EU based ones. Some attempts at this have been previously made in Germany, which should give hope to other countries in the EU.

The cost of moving away from Google/Microsoft tech stacks will be a drop in the bucket compared to the wealth that these companies extract from EU. Similarly, offering alternatives to social media like Friendica, Mastodon, Pixelfed, Lemmy, and perhaps PeerTube, would be a huge win against disinformation and propaganda from other countries. We should also push for instant messaging platforms like SimpleX that do not rely on Google's proprietary Push Notification services, and perhaps deGoogled Android devices.

If the recent events are not a catalyst to push everyone away from US software in the EU, I do not know what else will. Do you think that this would be possible at all?

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submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com to c/europe@feddit.org
 

I have never donated money in my life before, but what happened yesterday really upset me. Ended up sending some money this morning. I know that my small donation won't contribute to much, but I am trying to help :D

I hope this post doesn't break any rules!

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