Skip Navigation

User banner
data1701d (He/Him)
data1701d (He/Him) @ data1701d @startrek.website
Posts
163
Comments
1,147
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Janeway responds to “nuqneH” with a very aggressive, spit-filled “nuqneH”, which most Klingons would laugh at were it any other human.

  • I’m rather sad to have never attended a convention - I was born in Vegas and lived there the first 15 years of my life.

  • We could have a convoluted retcon about Trip Tucker surviving somehow, but I kind of just want them to pull a Shaxs; someone brings it up and Tucker says, “We don’t talk about that.”

  • The early decon scenes are comparatively mild, which is saying something... don't Google Vulcan Neuropressure; I wouldn't wish such horrors upon my worst enemy.

  • I also enjoyed Prodigy, although I will warn the first half of season one is a little difficult to get through, but the rest of the series welds you to your seat!

  • I second this. It’s basically just an extra TNG-era spinoff that fits really well after Voyager.

    The first season is a bit rough (though you’ve got to watch it at least once - important info for the rest of the show’s plot) but then the show starts doing its characters really well and has a sincerity to it you wouldn’t expect from its genre.

    When I first heard of the idea of an adult animated Star Trek comedy, I thought it was a terrible idea, but they executed it so darn well, and it’s my second favorite series behind DS9.

  • Watching Enterprise (currently on season 3), I’m not sure I can blame you, despite the plot getting interesting.

    Each 90s series has their fair share of “I want to put Rick Berman in my trunk and [redacted]” moments, but Enterprise takes it to a bit of a disgusting level.

    Like, with 7 in Voyager, you learn to tune out the unnecessary catsuit after a while and just enjoy an otherwise good character, but they take the sexualization of T’Pol’s character to such extremes that it interferes with her just being a person on the show.

    I’m watching ENT because I’m a sucker for canon, but I totally don’t blame you if you skip it.

  • I use this image, which mostly just works (other than the need to throw model info and a made-up serial into a config.plist.

    https://github.com/thenickdude/KVM-Opencore

    I can’t say for 15.6, but mine is currently running 15.2 just fine; I usually fall a bit behind on updates since these days, I only really use it to upload They Might Ne Giants rarities to my cloud library via Apple Music.

    The only annoyance with the VM is iPhones can’t connect over USB easily.

  • I don’t use Proxmox, but since it’s all libvirt anyway, I’ve frequently found someone doing something on it that helps me with my VMs.

    For instance, my GPU passthrough Hackintosh VM is part based on some dude who made a tutorial for Proxmox that applies elsewhere.

  • I mean, that’s at least a grounded Anglicization that I could see someone in-universe coming up with. Pronunciation-wise, ”Fek’lhr” isn’t so bad either, but still incredibly stupid spelling-wise.

  • Who the heck came up with “Fek’lhr”?! Like, it’s clearly it intended to be a Klingon word and not an Anglicization, but they failed miserably to actually follow the rules of the language.

    • “F” is not used for that sound in any major Klingon Romanization system (“f” corresponds to “ng” in xifan hol mapping); “v” is the closest thing.
    • “k” is also not used; that should be a “q”.
    • The apostrophe usually only comes after vowels, as it denotes a glottal stop.
    • “h” is not pronounced silently like it is here; it’s a weird consonant kind of like a soft g.

    It’s so bad it looks like Okrand had to fix it in one of his Klingon audio tapes - the official Klingon word is “veqlargh”, leaving the TNG onscreen versiob as a very weird Anglicization with a pointless apostrophe.

  • Funny, though honestly, I've always just used the instance website. I haven't seriously tried Voyager yet, and perhaps I should.

  • No.

    I usually just use Bash; there’s a certain level of complexity where it begins to be more reasonable to just use Python.

  • Yes and no. I think connotation is important here; “stable” means different things in different contexts even within computing, and they both denote different but important things - kind of like free of cost verses freedom.

    In the distro case, people need/want a distribution where they know a new version won’t come and break their config when they update at 2 AM and miss it in the changelog, and “stable” has been agreed upon as the term in that context. Of course, that can change, as all language does, but that’s just the current convention.

    Also, Debian tends to make sure software is not unusable before stable is shipped (the Nvidia thing is an anomaly I’ll explain below); while they sometimes fail, as you’ve hinted, I find it quite rare that it actually happens. Also, the “static” of Debian isn’t absolute; if something really has a breaking bug or a security vulnerability that affects overall system usability (basically something that can’t be fixed by installing a Flatpak), they will put out a fix, like with the Linux kernel or a web browser (via the security repo, included by default in all installs).

    Additionally, looking at this changelog, while the Nvidia situation is objectively a bit embarrassing, it looks like they were working on getting them updated, but just didn’t have much luck - I’m guessing a breaking change in the software that made it harder to package. Also, it’s in the non-free repo, which is on the back burner compared to the rest of the distro - something in the main repo will usually only be at most a few months behind at time of distro release.

    https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/nvidia-graphics-drivers

  • I mean, I think static is stable.

    I feel like stability in some contexts means more than just the software not crashing often (although that is the big part); it means being able to expect the behavior to stay the same until you’re ready to upgrade to the next release and confront the new behavior all at once, sort of like upgrading Windows XP to Windows 7.

    There’s certainly a place for rolling release - I use Debian Testing on my desktop - but I certainly appreciate being able to go a month without opening my laptop without getting a daunting notification like “There are 1578 updates available “ (on my Debian 12 Thinkpad, it’s usually only double digit, very minor updates).

  • Someone else brought up Virt Manager here, which is my preferred; if you’ve ever used VirtualBox, you’ll probably be fine on Virt Manager. I like Virt Manager for using GTK3, as I’m in XFCE. I wouldn’t be surprised if both applications have similar settings, as they’re both LibVirt front ends, it seems.

    Also, DistroBox, while a different sort of thing, is great for the sort of thing OP mentioned in that last paragraph. I usually just use command line, but there seems to be an unofficial GUI out there.

  • Now I feel like a really awesome thing would be something like Star Trek: Excelsior as an animated series that focuses on Captain Sulu after Generations.

    I mean, Patrick Stewart did Picard in his 80s, and Takei’s only 3 years older than Stewart. However, Takei would probably be well into his 90s by the time this hypothetical series went into production; you’d also probably have to audition an understudy from the start in case Takei kicked the bucket.

  • This Might Be Lemmy: They Might Be Giants (tmbg) Community @lemmy.world

    Song(s) that you like but can’t listen to often

    Linux @lemmy.ml

    An update on my Thinkpad E16

    Daystrom Institute @startrek.website

    Gender and Orientation in Vulcan Society

    Risa @startrek.website

    I never realized that DeForest Kelley's final on-screen role was in this postmodern masterpiece!

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    (Solved) A Minor Mystery: Can anyone identify where this image of DeForest Kelley pulling a rabbit out of a hat comes from?

    This Might Be Lemmy: They Might Be Giants (tmbg) Community @lemmy.world

    Songs that Deserved a Music Video

    This Might Be Lemmy: They Might Be Giants (tmbg) Community @lemmy.world

    Thoughts on Cheekface

    Music @lemmy.ml

    This Might Be Lemmy: A Brand New They Might Be Giants Fan Community for 2024

    This Might Be Lemmy: They Might Be Giants (tmbg) Community @lemmy.world

    Most oddly specific TMBG song you have seen a non-fan like

    Music @lemmy.world

    This Might Be Lemmy: A Brand New They Might Be Giants Fan Community for 2024

    Star Trek Social Club @startrek.website

    Thoughts on TAS Theme

    The Internet in Ancient Times @lemmy.world

    No Enkidu Love in Mesopotemians

    HistoryMemes @lemmy.ml

    No Enkidu Love in the They Might Be Giants song on the Mesopotamians

    This Might Be Lemmy: They Might Be Giants (tmbg) Community @lemmy.world

    No Enkidu Love in Mesopotemians

    Alternative Nation: The Fediverse's Alternative and Indie Music Community @lemmy.world

    This Might Be Lemmy: A Brand New They Might Be Giants Fan Community for 2024

    New Communities @lemmy.world

    This Might Be Lemmy: A Brand New They Might Be Giants Fan Community for 2024

    Risa @startrek.website

    This Realization Caused the TOS cast to climb the Black Mountain

    This Might Be Lemmy: They Might Be Giants (tmbg) Community @lemmy.world

    What are your favorite demos/bootlegs?

    This Might Be Lemmy: They Might Be Giants (tmbg) Community @lemmy.world

    Hot Take: Long Tall Weekend is an underrated album.

    Daystrom Institute @startrek.website

    What is the political status of Hysperia?