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Joined 9 months ago
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Cake day: February 19th, 2024

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  • I asked this question many years ago on a Usenet group, and the answer was along the lines of what we’re seeing is many millions of years after those orbits began, and that they all eventually flatten out due to the gravity of the other objects in orbit.

    So you could have 2 objects at roughly the same orbital distance but perpendicular to one another (eg. one orbiting the star’s poles and the other around it’s equator), and over time the small amount of gravitational force they exert on one another will bring them roughly into the same plane.

    Hopefully someone better versed in the topic can come along to explain it better than I can.





  • TIL this is a thing. I started doing that over 30 years ago with SLS and Slackware when that was the only choice.

    This was pre-PnP (also pre-JPEG!), so you had to know all the addresses, IRQs, DMA info, etc, of your hardware or you’d get… unexpected results. make it and they will come…

    After countless distros and flavours over the years, I still use Debian for servers and now use EndeavourOS for desktop/laptops.



  • If using Firefox:

    • uBlock Origin: Ads be gone. You need to select/add the blocklists you want.
    • Privacy Badger: Automatic tracker blocker with no configuration required.
    • Cookie AutoDelete: Saves cookies for the pages you want it to, and nukes everything else.
    • Firefox Multi-Account Containers: Keep your activity in separate silos. That Banking container cookie won’t be visible to that Porn container’s JavaScript, Meta’s container can only see Meta’s stuff, etc.

    I use a bunch of others, but the above are my bare minimum.

    Don’t believe anyone who tells you that one extension does everything.




  • Great advice. For me, it’s the irreplaceable data first, and then stuff like configs and credentials/keys.

    My borg-backup (to my NAS) config is “My Documents” type files, /etc stuff I’m likely to customise, and home stuff except the stuff like “*Cache”, “*Storage”, assets/icons/history/recent/blah. It’s tedious to fine-tune, but I figure too much is infinitely better than too little.

    If I want to be able to do an image-based restore, then I’d use a different tool. But life’s too short for that.




  • high cpu usage by just moving the mouse.

    This sounds like co-operative multi-tasking on a single CPU. I remember this with Windows 3.1x around 30 years ago, where the faster you moved your mouse, the more impact it would have on anything else you were running. That text scrolling too fast? Wiggle the mouse to slow it down (etc, etc).

    I thought we’d permanently moved on with pre-emptive multi-tasking, multi-threading and multiple cores… 🤦🏼‍♂️


  • My Endeavour laptop got it today. Couple of tweaks and it was running perfectly.

    Funny you mention desktop: I’ve been waiting for Plasma 6 before rebuilding my Ubuntu desktop with Endeavour. Didn’t want to jump the gun, find out that it impacts gaming performance, and then have to rebuild back again. :) Guess I have a desktop to rebuild now…



  • Think of the problem being solved. The Fediverse solves multiple problems, but most notably ensuring that our contributions won’t be paywalled by some corporate grifter. The post and comment data itself is free and open, subject only to TOS and regional legislation.

    If you consider your conversations valuable, stick with something like secure messaging application groups. And then hope nobody in that group does what you imagine in your second point.