• 1 Post
  • 182 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: June 15th, 2023

help-circle
  • That was an example usecase, an MVP, to show it works and can communicate via the fediverse.

    Comments from the post I linked:

    The idea is that every fungi-node also has a UI, yes. So you would be able to browse the AI models - for example if you chat with bot A, and the bot is currently learning with bot B and C, those bots would be visible to you and you could open their UI, too. And it should also show bots with which it trained earlier, too.

    This way you could “browse” the resulting AI web via the browser.

    Well, its similar to a botnet, but one that is open and transparent. You can browse the different nodes, etc. And you can (at least hopefully in the future) add your own computing resources to the network to participate in the AI training.









  • I remember a lot of things were not working. For example I was a GNU screen user, and no terminal multiplexer could work at that time in WSL1. They added support to tmux after a while and I switched to that and never switched back, rest is history…

    The point is just like how not everything working ootb in wine, the same is true for the other direction.

    They would have to invest more work which costs money, but if they just ship the linux kernel, which is already written, and the users already bought big ssds and have highspeed internet, so they could just use that for free, it makes more sense, and makes more money to the shareholders








  • It wasn’t clear for me what the hell is a “Global Shortcut” I heard the term first time in my life, I found the answer in the upstream PR:

    It’s designed so that applications can register actions that can be triggered globally (i.e. regarless of the system’s state, like focus).

    It’s strange it wasn’t possible until now, or the main thing it’s now DE independent?

    On Gnome I use Run or raise extension, and with this I can run or switch to running apps with global shortcuts, so this was definitely working from Gnome extensions.




  • From the post:

    But first question, as someone who isn’t tech inclined and tinkering […] that runs out of the box without me having to install additional software manually or at least automatic setup wizards because like hardware

    Don’t recommend Arch to users who doesn’t want to tinker please. I know, I use Arch. Arch regularly requires user intervention, you should see them on the news: https://archlinux.org/news/ You can see, 3-4 times a year you have to fiddle with some settings, otherwise you can get an unbootable system.

    And that’s how we get “the (unrealistic) expectation I had of Linux was all command line stuff and techno babble.”