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What is a product that didn't live up to its advertised claims?
  • Air-up water bottles. When I bought mine it claimed to be a better water bottle all-around.

    Its primary gimmick of tricking the brain into tasting the scent works well, I did drink a lot more water without needing actual flavouring. The fact that I could (unofficially) 3D print my own reusable flavouring pods to be a little more eco-friendly was a nice surprise and the reason I decided to try it.

    The "better bottle" part is utter horse crap. It leaks when tipped over, even when tightly closed. Their marketing team went as far as adding "sip, don't tip" to the instructions instead of making the cap properly seal.

    Drinking from it was a chore as there was no water pressure and the constant bubbling (lets be real, its more like wet fart) noises made it impossible to use in silent settings.

    I ended up going back to reusing a disposable bottle until it leaks even though the thought and feeling of something flavourless being in my mouth is revolting (its a sensory thing).

  • Where I can make my noob questions about selfhosting?
  • Don't worry about seeming dumb or noob-ish. Everyone starts somewhere. How can we learn without asking questions or making mistakes?

    The /r/selfhosted wiki is still amazing and you might learn the terminology needed to turn your "stupid questions" into smart ones :)

  • Maven Imported 1.12 Million Fediverse Posts
  • To be honest, the extreme negative reaction was a surprise to me, as I thought interaction between disparate systems was the entire point, but clearly we didn’t navigate the culture correctly.

    Noooo fucking shit? If they spent more than a minute on a proper instance and not milquetoast mastodon dot social, they would have realised that a good number of fedi users despise shenanigans like this?

  • What's your approach for understanding a big codebase?
  • I think about a feature or bugfix that I want to work on, then shoehorn it in by any means necessary. Once my code is confirmed working, the planning phase begins and I go through the module(s) I'm working with line-by-line and match the original author's coding style and usually by that point I pick up a trail or discover a bunch of helper functions/libraries that I can use to replace parts of my code, and continue from there.

    As others have said, configuration files is a great way to learn that. Pick a config option you want to learn about, jump to the config loader, find where the variable gets set, then do a global search for that function. From there it starts to fall into place.

    Sidenote: I also learned rust this way. It took me around 6 months to learn the rgit codebase solely from adding features that I wanted from cgit. Now I'm at the point where rebasing from upstream to my soft-fork doesn't mess up any of my changes, and am able add or fix things with relative ease. If memory serves, a proper debugger (firedbg is excellent!) was used on several occasions to track down an extremely annoying and ambiguous error message that was due to rust's trait system being a pain in my ass.

  • Content Warnings Do Not Reduce Distress, Study Shows
  • Definitely! Voyager has been wonderful when it comes to filtering and my filter/block list is massive. I do have the issue where the Lemmy timelines get stale quickly and All is a ghost town but its worth it to see mostly positive things. The desktop experience is atrocious.

    On the microblog side, moving to an instance running Sharkey was the best thing to do as Sharkey has the feature to hide the CWs entirely.

  • Content Warnings Do Not Reduce Distress, Study Shows
  • From my experience, CW only works if the post is completely hidden from the feed without the option to view it.

    Blahaj Zone had the option to yeet that shit from the timeline entirely and it worked amazingly until a migration fucked that up leaving it broken for months and my mental health dropped off a cliff because holy fuck did I not realise most of the people I followed posted so much depressing shit that triggered my cptsd. The urge to click the button was too strong.

    Its par for the Fediverse course, really. Good ideas and half-assed implementations.

  • Suggestion please: overdive pedal
  • DOD OD 250 (the yellow one not grey) is still my fav. It was my first pedal and still kicks ass. I believe theres a VST of it now.

    As for "budget" you can build one from a PCB or hand wire it yourself, its so old theres no multi layer PCBs, I built one for use with a bass back in 2009 or 2010 since I didn't want to modify the original.

  • Microsoft’s Xbox Is Planning More Cuts After Studio Closings
  • They can’t even use a lot of these IPs anymore.

    That's the thing though. Gamers have a special kind of amnesia that gets triggered every time BIG_IP_OF_THEIR_LIKING releases a new sequel or edition. The communities on Lemmy and reddit are unfortunately not indicative of how the wider audience actually perceives games. We're a fringe group, and the publishers/studios bank hard on that. The uneducated and apathetic masses are their target audience. If the gaming world listened to the likes of Lemmy and reddit users, micro/macrotransactions, early-access hell, and half-finished releases wouldn't have become common practice. But here we are.

    Fallout is now associated with 76 unless you’re thinking of Obsidian.

    You may be right. Fallout 76 has however seen a record number of players since the show aired. That's commonplace with most gaming franchises when a film or TV series comes out. See also: The Last of Us, and SWTOR when The Mandalorian came out.

    (I personally think of Neverwinter Nights 2 when thinking of Obsidian. t'was peak gaming)

    Blizzard is a shell of its old self, cutting interest in Warcraft, Starcraft, and Overwatch.

    I agree with you here. In reality, Blizzard still consistently has queue issues when releasing a new WoW expansion or game, even after all this time. They know it happens, and won't scale up for launch day on WoW retail AND Classic. Their target audience eats that shit up and I'm saying this as a former player that quit during Battle for Azeroth. No comment on Starcraft as I quit when the OG Starcraft scene died down on aus-1 back in the day. Overwatch 1 was seeing incredible numbers when I played from launch until Moria was released. OW2 being a pay-to-win shit show ate into their numbers until they gave up the pay-to-win bullshit. I see more and more of my friends and streamers playing it again now that Bobby Kotick is gone. I'm quite disappointed in some of them, but it is what it is.

    There’s rumors even Call of Duty is struggling to retain relevance in new releases.

    Good thing they're just rumours until the earnings report comes. Sony has poorly-redacted court documents stating that CoD is their bread and butter on the playstation. There's no way that's changing in the forseeable future (at least not in the billions of dollars range), even with the absolute shit-show that was MW3. When MW4 comes out, the diehard fans will forget it even happened, as they have with every single release since its inception.

  • Which GPU or GPU brand would you buy for gaming these days?
  • I'm interested in your use of the Arc card for media transcoding. What one did you get and how would you say it compares to a GTX 960? The one in my server died and I stuck a spare 2060 in there a while back and am looking to downgrade to something sensible.

    Most of my media is 1080p x264 with some 4k HEVC (and growing) if that helps.

  • BTRFS for Linux gaming?
  • Yeah same here regarding immutable distros. I've only dabbled in the reading and it seems to fit your use case. ^^

    Keeping my eye on the thread for future reference. Best of luck!

  • You shouldn't be able to join a competitive pvp match or start a raid without a working microphone
  • THIS a thousand times. World of Warcraft became dead to me when it implemented voice chat in the game's client. I can't hear well enough for voice chat and while I can speak just fine, I refuse to buy peripherals so that the hearies can feel superior with their lack of environmental awareness.

    @OP needs to check their privilege.

  • awesome-zsh-plugins: A collection of ZSH frameworks, plugins, themes and tutorials
    github.com GitHub - unixorn/awesome-zsh-plugins: A collection of ZSH frameworks, plugins, themes and tutorials.

    A collection of ZSH frameworks, plugins, themes and tutorials. - unixorn/awesome-zsh-plugins

    GitHub - unixorn/awesome-zsh-plugins: A collection of ZSH frameworks, plugins, themes and tutorials.

    A collection of ZSH frameworks, plugins, tutorials & themes inspired by the various awesome list collections out there.

    0
    InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)HO
    hollyberries @programming.dev
    Posts 1
    Comments 67