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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/)SM
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449
Joined
12 mo. ago

  • We did a rewatch just in time. S1 is as phenomenal as ever. S2 as such a jarring contrast.

    That being said, E3 was SLIGHTLY less shit. I'll wait for the second arc for my final judgement, but as of now it's at least thinkable that the wheat field / jungle plotlines are re-shot shoe-ins for.... something. The Mon / Dedra plotlines have a very different feel to it. Certainly not S1, but far above the other plotlines.

    I'm not filled with confidence though. Had a look on IMDb, and basically the entire crew was swapped out between seasons.

  • Not the usual topic around here, but a scream into the void no less....

    Andor season 1 was art.

    Andor season 2 is just... Bad.

    All the important people appear to have been replaced. It's everything - music, direction, lighting, sets (why are we back to The Volume after S1 was so praised for its on-location sets?!), and the goddamn shit humor.

    Here and there, a conversation shines through from (presumably) Gilroy's original script, everything else is a farce, and that is me being nice.

    The actors are still phenomenal.

    But almost no scene seems to have PURPOSE. This show is now just bastardizing its own AESTHETICS.

    What is curious though is that two days before release, the internet was FLOODED with glowing reviews of "one of the best seasons of television of all time", "the darkest and most mature star wars has ever been", "if you liked S1, you will love S2". And now actual, post-release reviews are impossible to find.

    Over on reddit, every even mildly critical comment is buried. Seems to me like concerted bot actions tbh, a lot of the glowing comments read like LLM as well.

    Idk, maybe I'm the idiot for expecting more. But it hurts to go from a labor-of-love S1 which felt like an instruction manual for revolution, so real was what it had to say and critique, to S2 "pew pew, haha, look, we're doing STAR WARS TM" shit that feels like Kenobi instead of Andor S1.

  • Managing 30+ machines with NixOS in a single unified config, currently sitting at a total of around 17k lines of nix code.

    In other words, I have put a lot of time into this. It was a very steep learning curve, but it's paid for itself multiple times over by now.

    For "newcomers", my observations can be boiled down to this: if you only manage one machine, it's not worth it. Maaaaaybe give home-manager a try and see if you like it.

    Situation is probably different with things like Silverblue (IMO throwing those kinds of distros in with Guix and NixOS is a bit misleading - very different philosophy and user experience), but I can only talk about Nix here.

    With Nix, the real benefit comes once you handle multiple machines. Identical or similar configurations get combined or parametrized. Config values set for Host A can be reused and decisions be made automatically based on it in Host B, for example:

    • all hosts know my SSH pub keys from first boot, without ever having to configure anything in any of them
    • my NAS IP is set once, all hosts requiring NAS access just reuse it implicitly
    • creating new proxmox VMs just means adding, on average, 10 lines of nix config (saying: your ID will be this, you will run that service) and a single command, because the heavy lifting and configuring has already been done, once -...
  • Naja OK, sie ist Netzwerktechnikerin. Auf Feuerwänden o.Ä. hat sie sehr viel mehr Erfahrung und Durchhaltevermögen. Aber bei Linux reicht es, dass in keiner Desktopumgebung die Netzwerkinfos beim Maus-Hovern über dem Netzwerksymbol nach ihrem Geschmack formatiert ist...

  • Sehr basiert. Pinguin sei mit dir!

    Ich kann meine Partnerin leider nicht überzeugen. Sie ist Informatikerin, braucht keinerlei properitäre Weichware, aber lässt sich von den kleinsten Kleinigkeiten abbringen

  • For manga, I've found Mihon to be nicest, by far, and it supports the API. For books, I am currently "stuck" on koreader on Android (which "only" supports OPDS-PS). I do most of my reading on a reMarkable currently, and that has no supporting client. Writing one is on my to-do list, but it's a bit daunting of a task....

    Here is a pretty good list of what is supported where.

  • Haven't had any issues in that regard, so can't really say, sorry. I have two folders (Mangas and ebooks) on my NAS, and in Kavita, created a library for each.

    You absolutely can edit metadata, although I personally haven't had the need yet. I use readarr and suwayomi for "obtaining" books and manga, respectively, and what they come up with is usually just fine.

  • I went through essentially the same thing a couple months ago. Tried Calibre (and Calibre server) since everyone recommended it.

    Really disliked it. Calibre is great for converting ebooks, but has shit management and webserving capabilities.

    I ended up with Kavita and am super happy. On the web client, both management and actual reading are a pleasure. Any phone/tablet client supporting OPDS works perfectly to read/download your manga/books from the server.

    And a select few clients go a step further, supporting Kavita's API, which allows for 2-way sync (effectively, syncing reading progress between all your devices).

  • ich_iel @feddit.org

    ich 🌶️🌶️🌶️ iel

    SneerClub @awful.systems

    Devin, the "$2 Billion AI software engineer" turns out to be a complete scam. Who could have thunk!

    Linux @lemmy.ml

    How would I go about gaining access to a locked-down Linux device I own.

    Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Self-Hosted setup for remote music lessons?

    196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone

    Can someone rule-splain this

    Selfhosted @lemmy.world

    Can't use Crunchyroll via WireGuard