

Thanks for that handy search result link.
Really makes me want to play Rings of Saturn again :)
Thanks for that handy search result link.
Really makes me want to play Rings of Saturn again :)
What an incredible image.
I almost like it more than the artist rendition, even though it is way easier to understand/visualize.
Is this a real “photograph” (including non-visible or even radar imagery) or computer generated from a simulation of some sort?
I’ve had this exact same gripe and can thankfully report that running EarlyOOM has fixed this for me.
Opening the app for the first time on my Fairphone 5 (listed as unsupported) actually crashed the OS, but after that it seems to be working ok.
Closing out of the in-app gallery causes the app to crash. But that can easily be worked around by using some other gallery app.
I’ll be testing it for a bit to see how it fares against other HDR methods…
And please don’t understand this the wrong way.
Ibis seems like a really cool project but with it being roughly half a year old me and many other people here simply have never heard of it before.
Including even a single short sentence describing what Ibis is in this and future posts helps us find projects that we care about more easily.
And we obviously care about Rust projects, otherwise none of us would be here.
Ibis is a federated online encyclopedia similar to Wikipedia.
This should be the first sentence of the post body.
Out of curiosity I’ve let it rate Low<-Tech Magazine, a website run on an ARM SBC powered exclusively with off-grid solar power, and that only achieves 87% / A.
* $400 / yr
You can use their online web-editor (similar to OverLeaf for LaTeX) or download the open-source engine and run it locally (there are extensions available for many text editors).
Compared to LaTeX I find it much more comfortable to work with. It comes with sane, modern defaults and doesn’t need any plugins just to generate a (localized) bibliography or include links.
Since Typst is very young compared to LaTeX I’m sure that there are numerous docs / workflows that can’t be reproduced at the moment but if you don’t need some special feature I’d recommend giving it a shot.
The development of Piper is being driven by the Home Assistant Project. That probably makes it one of the larger OSS TTS projects. Hope may not be lost yet ;)
Seeing these little IT gems all over Lemmy always makes me smirk :)
As in video wallpapers? Sure. KDE Plasma for one lets you install a bunch of wallpaper plugins ranging from video playback to live computed shaders and everything in between.
Cool to see support for the QOI format in a popular software package.
The “add to home screen” button turns into an “install” button when Firefox detects that the website is a progressive web app (PWA). Other browsers do the same.
The difference is that a PWA can define a custom icon and name for the “app” button on your home screen and that it can use some clever caching making many PWAs offline capable (meaning you don’t need an internet connection to open the web page).
I understand the reluctance to press “install” but in the case of PWAs the install size is tiny and fully contained in Firefox and you get the added benefit of faster startup / loading times due to caching.
Might not fit into your plans but if you run Proxmox you can easily backup to an offsite computer (or VM) running Proxmox Backup Server (PBS).
From their website:
By supporting incremental, fully deduplicated backups, Proxmox Backup Server significantly reduces network load and saves valuable storage space. With strong encryption and methods of ensuring data integrity, you can feel safe when backing up data, even to targets which are not fully trusted.
The steam page has a demo that features the full game but has saving disabled.
Highly recommend taking that for a quick ring-dive.