dreadbeef

joined 1 year ago
[–] dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 8 months ago

Im merely making a value proposition because im an engineer and I've had this same exact problem and desire. Call it experience — a static blog is fine since I can build one of those in my sleep, but for me I wanted to post on it when I was away and only had my phone. Now do I put it on my git? A separate notebook that is synced somewhere? I have ADHD—if I want to write I have to write and I can't just hope to remember it sometime later. Now what's the point of my blog if I can't write on it when I need to but simply don't have my desktop nearby? Also you have to have pay for a CI to do the building anyway for a static site generator, that ain't free and even if you found a service that provides CI for free you're just externalizing your costs somewhere else. Laws of thermodynamics still apply. So instead of paying for CI to build your static site, I'd argue just pay for the server rendered site. Why choose to have a 1gb ram build server for a blog when you can just use that server to run the blog.

And they want federation support. Ghost is working on that as well speak. What static site generator supports federation?

[–] dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com -1 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (4 children)

It costs like $3/mo to host it. If that's too resource intensive then I don't know what your limits are. Compute isn't free—that literally breaks the laws of thermodynamics, no matter what you're told by hosting services, and ghost does server side rendering and has a dynamic admin dashboard and can even work headless... and it costs less than $3/mo for your own personal open source cms.

If you need something that costs less then you can just build your own I guess, but how many hours of your time is that worth when you could just be spending $3/mo. If you make minimum wage at $7/hr one hour of work gets you two months of running a website.

[–] dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (1 children)

Gonna be honest, never used ffmpeg for images lol. I often take images from PDFs that have transparency (rpg books to import into my vtt) and they come out of pdfimages with an opaque greyscale alpha mask and an opaque image. I found it easy to apply the mask with imagemagick, though. Ffmpeg can probably do it but just never had a use case. I just use cwebp to convert because that's my primary use-case: converting pngs to lossy webp files and cwebp is good enough for me for that:)

[–] dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com 0 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (1 children)

Im recommending them to anyone who wants free software and is willing to invest their time into understanding how to do things for free and without concern over their data. If you aren't willing to invest the necessary time it isn't for you and that's why I said it. It's okay if these don't work for you. That's valid. But it does, in fact, work for many others who are not you.

I mentioned the manual because you claimed you didn't know what the commands do. If you read and take the time to learn the manual like you said you can do, you will, in fact, understand how the commands work. Additionally, this is public forum, my post may have been a reply to you but I understand other people may read my comment. Other people may have your frustrations but are not aware of the manuals that tell them exactly how the commands work. It only takes a bit of elbow grease, perhaps people other than you are willing to apply it?

I'm not sure if you saw it, but I did mention a gui application for converting files. I admit, I don't use it, but many people also save a lot of money using it, so it might be helpful. I have no idea if it's useful for your needs though.

Here's "ffmpeg in 100 seconds" https://youtu.be/26Mayv5JPz0

Here's a video on ffmpeg and imagemagick: https://youtu.be/sKBM4M-kuCg

Additionally, you can just learn how to read man pages: https://itsfoss.com/linux-man-page-guide/

There's a neat little guide that'll help you learn how to read documentation.

Once you've read through that let me know what confuses you about documentation.

[–] dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (3 children)

I understand that you may not know the commands you are told by strangers, but many of these are tools are meant for professionals. ffmpeg, for example, is used by many industries and companies worth millions of dollars to handle production workloads. They often have documentation to tell you what they do, though

There's a manual for ffmpeg for example: https://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg.html

Here's imgemagick's documentation: https://imagemagick.org/script/magick.php

Obviously you won't understand any of that because the command line doesn't work for you, but for those of us who do understand it and can use it, it's very informative.

I think handbrake is a gui wrapper on top of ffmpeg, but I never used it, I just memorized the ffmpeg commands and can type so much faster than i can click.

[–] dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 8 months ago (3 children)

Pandoc for documents, ffmpeg for video , imagemagick for images

[–] dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com 0 points 9 months ago

Killing fascists is a very good alternative to voting them out

[–] dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com 9 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

And remove the need for keys to exchanged and suddenly the impossible is possible. Access to the hardware can always beat any software, it just needs wits. It has to communicate over some sort of NIC or other chip that can be desoldered and replaced with a custom firmware. Or its pins might have a Linux socket connection. Who knows how many insecure holes are there once you have access to the boards. Once you get there it, and enough people care to do it, it can be as easy as an ifixit guide away with an open source board or something, or hopefully just a flash of firmware away.

[–] dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com 17 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (2 children)

If I had a Tesla and someone smart enough to hack into I wouldn't doubt I could probably figure out how they build their dashboards and reverse engineer them, they're most likely browser based or qt or something like it. It'd be too costly to do it in anything else and Id bet many spacex dashes are the same tech. But I ain't rich enough to get one of those things so someone else has to. There's only so many ways to draw pixels on a screen in the name of profit

[–] dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

I failed my hirevue (I got a 40%) but my recruiter talked to the company and my previous manager gave a glowing recommendation so I got the job. I allegedly did a good job on the hirevue by all humans involved. Fuck this AI shit. The only way I got this job was because of humans, the ai did everything it could prevent the company from getting their preferred candidate. If the job market wasn't so fucked and I haven't been unemployed for 5 months in the past two years I'd give this company the bird and tell them to fuck off too, but I don't have health insurance and my bank account is drained.

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