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One big happy family.
  • You're right, it's not "just" Proton. I also tried recently GoG for Pod and... it just worked! From buying the (sigh) Windows game to playing on Linux in literally minutes. Amazing.

    For WMR I don't know unfortunately. Monado does work though and I would check https://lvra.gitlab.io as it's a great starting point, maybe starting with the Monado SteamVR plugin.

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    One big happy family.
  • So... FWIW I post often about I have a painless NVIDIA experience, including playing Windows only games, including VR games.

    I thought "Damn... how did I get so lucky?" and yesterday while tinkering with partitions (as one does...) I decided I'd try a "speed run" to go from no system to a VR Windows only game running on Linux.

    I started from Debian 12 600Mb ISO and ~1h later I was playing.

    I'm not saying everybody should have a perfect experience playing games on Linux with an NVIDIA but ... mine was again pretty straightforward.

    I'd argue it's easier with Ubuntu and accepting non-free repository, probably having the same result, ~1hr from 0 to play, without even using the command line once.

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    OpenAI is reportedly going all-in as a for-profit company
  • I don't think I understand your point, are you saying there is no benefit in running locally and that Websites or APIs are more convenient?

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    OpenAI is reportedly going all-in as a for-profit company
  • improves my experience coding in unfamiliar languages

    Alan Perlis said "A programming language that doesn't change the way you think is not worth learning."

    So... if you code in another language without actually "getting it", solely having a usable result, what is actually the point of changing languages?

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    OpenAI is reportedly going all-in as a for-profit company
  • FWIW I did try a lot (LLMs, code, generative AI for images, 3D models) in a lot of ways (CLI, Web based, chat bot) both locally and using APIs.

    I don't use any on a daily basis. I find it exciting that we can theoretically do a lot "more" automatically but... so far the results have not been worth the efforts. Sadly some of the best use cases are exactly what you highlighted, i.e low effort engagement for spam. Overall I find that either working with a professional (script writer, 3D modeler, dev, designer, etc) is a lot more rewarding but also more efficient which itself makes it cheaper.

    For use cases where customization helps while quality does matter much due to scale, i.e spam, then LLMs and related tools are amazing.

    PS: I'd love to hear the opinion of a spammer actually, maybe they also think it's not that efficient either.

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    OpenAI is reportedly going all-in as a for-profit company
  • I like Ollama, and recommend it to tinker, but I admit this "LLM Explorer" is quite neat thanks to sections like "LLMs Fit 16GB VRAM"

    Ollama just works but it doesn't help to pick which model best fits your needs.

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    Lots of negativity towards AI lately, but consider:
  • that doesn’t make the things it ruins intrinsically bad

    Hmmm tricky, see for example https://thenewinquiry.com/super-position/ where capitalism is very good at transforming everything and anything, including culture in this example, to preserve itself while making more money for the few. It might not indeed change good things to bad once they already exist, but it can gradually change good things to new bad things while attempting to make them look like the good old ones it replaces.

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    DeArrow is an open source browser extension for crowdsourcing better titles and thumbnails on YouTube.
  • Yes I'm talking about DeArrow. Well yes but to be more precise they initially "block" the addon from working for few hours then they let you use it without paying. Slightly different, again I'm not criticizing just highlighting this is not how most add-ons do work.

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    DeArrow is an open source browser extension for crowdsourcing better titles and thumbnails on YouTube.
  • Interesting that this extension is pay only, first time I see this. Again makes sense to go against a business model of "free" of cost but too expensive for sanity.

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    DeArrow is an open source browser extension for crowdsourcing better titles and thumbnails on YouTube.
  • I find YouTube itself to be so adversarial that I don't even use it anymore.

    Still, I'm installing both this and SponsorBlock to symbolically show support to this of projects that IMHO show that I want the Web MY way. I don't want to browse in whatever way maximizes attention and distraction to increase profit margin of surveillance capitalism.

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    Lemmy in a nutshell
  • You actually reminded me I have a Windows 100Go partition. I reduced its size but really, based on when I last boot on it, I should really delete it.

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    Student dorm does not allow wifi routers
  • You're just making another assumption, maybe the dorm has optic fiber with a big bandwidth and a lower latency that most home and business connection. Maybe OP doesn't care about 120hz and only heat. I don't think you are getting my point if you are pointing out imperfection about the current technology : it's possible.

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    I want an AI TV that blocks all forms of advertising.
  • no business in the capitalist world where selling ads is a billion dollar industry is going to make this available

    How about an open-hardware open-source project on e.g CrowdSupply (something like https://www.crowdsupply.com/jie-zou/rggber but dedicated) where everything is setup to do so efficiently, e.g an HDMI/HDMI box where you put the signal in, get the signal out, and on its own does nothing but cool looking visual filters, e.g from color to black&white, yet when the user reconfigure it, with community made filter, it removes ads?

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    I want an AI TV that blocks all forms of advertising.
  • annotate them by adding the time stamps then the location on the image

    Depending on your legislation it might be legally mandatory to disclose, so if one can have an automated way to know this, it would simplify greatly the problem.

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    I want an AI TV that blocks all forms of advertising.
  • I agree but I don't watch TV so I don't bother. Yet... I still hate product placement so I might be interested in such a solution. Anyway here is how I would do it :

    • evaluate what exists, e.g SponsorBlock, and see what's the closest that fit my need, try it, ask in forum or repository issues if modifications are possible
    • gather videos of the typically problematic content, say few hours to start
    • annotate them by adding the time stamps then the location on the image
    • replace problematic content with gradually complex solutions, e.g black, average color of the area, denoising (quite compute intensive)
    • honestly evaluate the result
    • consider the biggest problem, e.g here on first pass fixed content so a detector based on machine learning for the type of content could help
    • iterate, sharing my result back with the closest interested community

    Honestly it's a worthwhile endeavor but be mindful it's an arm race. There are a LOT of smart people paid to add ads everywhere... but there are even more people, like you and I, eager to remove them. IMHO the key trick is, like SponsorBlock, to federate the efforts.

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