I’m beautiful and tough like a diamond…or beef jerky in a ball gown.

  • 9 Posts
  • 98 Comments
Joined 5 months ago
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Cake day: July 15th, 2025

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  • Because:

    1. I’m not a lazy, smooth-brained rube.
    2. I’m not in the business of selling AI to lazy, smooth-brained rubes
    3. I have no stake in the supply chain nor do I stand to profit from those selling AI to lazy, smooth-brained rubes.

    Furthermore:

    1. I don’t trust “AI”. If I’m going to have to fact check it anyway, might as well just do it myself and earn the damn knowledge.
    2. AI does not work for me (or you). It works for the companies who are forcing it on you and sucking up your data.
    3. The energy costs and water requirements are mindbogglingly staggering
    4. I refuse to feed or ride any hype train
    5. It’s creating scarcity of things that could be put to better use (energy, water, computer components, land, talent, you name it).
    6. It’s not even AI. It’s just a dead-end bullshit generator


  • do GSI roms still contain google binaries (play store, play services, etc…) or is it similar to a AOSP rom where its just a bare android image

    Yes. That’s to say they can be either depending on how the ROM was built. All of the GSI ROM builders I’ve worked with usually have multiple releases of the same build with different configurations: root, no root, with Google services (often MicroG), without Google services, combinations of both, etc.

    To my understanding, GSI ROMs are basically just the “userland” portion of a full ROM. Basically they use the stock/existing kernel, drivers, etc but replace the rest of the system that runs on top of it. If memory serves, they’re possible due to Project Treble. Sadly, they still require an unlocked bootloader to install, so they’re not a total fix-all.

    They’re also very generic generic images (hence the “G” in the term). They’re not optimized for any specific device and can be hit-or-miss feature wise depending on the device. If you’re already reading about a specific device on XDA forums, then you’ll probably be able to see what works and what doesn’t.

    TL;DR: Running a GSI ROM is like upgrading to a newer Linux distro but without upgrading the kernel.






  • I’m about that same age but am so glad we’ve largely abandoned the “www” for websites.

    On my personal project website, I have a custom listener setup to redirect people to “aarp.org” if they enter it with “www” instead of just the base domain. 😆

    server {
        listen              443 ssl;
        http2		        on;
        server_name         www.mydomain.xyz;
    
        ssl_certificate     /etc/letsencrypt/live/mydomain.xyz/fullchain.pem;
        ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/mydomain.xyz/privkey.pem;
        ssl_dhparam         /etc/nginx/conf.d/tls/shared/dhparam.pem;
        ssl_protocols       TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3;
        ssl_session_cache   shared:SSL:10m;
        ssl_session_timeout 15m;
      
        ...
        
        location ~* {
          return 301 https://aarp.org/;
        }
    }
    





  • I learned a long time ago to never install manufacturer printer drivers. Or, at least, never install them from the provided Setup.exe.

    They’ve always installed a bunch of bloatware (HP has always been the worst but other brands are just as bad).

    If you look in the setup folder, there’s usually the raw drivers you can install from Device Manager. If the driver package is just a single .exe file, you can usually unpack it with 7zip and get at its inner contents.

    If that fails, the system-included HP LaserJet 4200 PCL driver is about as close to a universal print driver as you can find lol.