- Go to the Minecraft servers of OpenAI and similar corporations.
- Find a room called “AI server room”, all while avoiding of defeating the mobs protecting the area.
- Destroy everything there.
- Go to the offices.
- Destroy everything there.
Game developer and artist.
Spoken languages: Hu, En, some Jp
Programming languages: C, C++, D, C#, Java
Mastodon: @ZILtoid1991
Github: https://github.com/ZILtoid1991
Also GPU drivers.
If you’re mad at NVidia for their closed-source drivers, then remember that ARM seldom makes their Linux drivers available for free, so you have to either have to deal with absolutely no GPU driver while the CPU does the graphics rendering (might not be a big deal on a NAS though), or with open source drivers that are less capable than the Nouveau drivers and even fiddlier to install. The ARM Mali driver issue is so bad I was legit thinking on a solution to run the Android binary blobs (which at least are available by ripping them off from the Android kernel) on regular Linux, a lot of function call redirects would likely take care of that issue.
ClosedAL
I’m from the generation that used to have sound cards, and I’m very sad about what Creative did to the industry…
My first encounters with it were very rough to say the least. Developers getting used to the jankiness of the graphical user interface (if they had one), was commonplace, and often I was pulling my hair when I was forced to use older versions of Blender and similar productivity software, and any suggestions for UI improvements were met with massive resistance from the developers, due to wanting to avoid “spoonfeeding”, and “not introducing users to write their own shell scripts, thus making them lazy and never discovering its feature of automating complex tasks”.
However, this changed when I started to get into drawing and downloaded Krita. It showed me that open source software doesn’t have to be an absolute nighmare to use, and not hiding handy but less-commonly used features behind a barely documented CLI. Even Blender became more usable in my experience than many more expensive 3D rendering software.
Not really, a big driving factor behind making devices irreparable is to uphold the illusion of infinite growth.
seethe
Very concerning word use from you.
The issue art faces isn’t that there’s not enough throughput, but rather there’s not enough time, both to make them and enjoy them.
Does the same behavior appear with DuckDuckGo, or other alternatives?
If you have a desktop, buy a second drive. You might even can use your Windows installation for apps with no (good) Linux alternatives.
Because they were far more useful to the average person, than the glorified spam making machine. Also it’s not like something like this happened for the first time…
EDIT: forgot to grammar