• 2 Posts
  • 206 Comments
Joined 10 months ago
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Cake day: September 12th, 2025

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  • Ahahaha. Fuck off. I’ve had plenty of friends from Taiwan where I’ve pointed out they were the Republic of China in their passport and I lived in China too so I’m far from ignorant on this. I’m just pointing out that you clearly have some biases. As do I to be fair but I didn’t give my personal position here, just pointed out that you’re pushing people in a slightly manipulative way in yours


  • Is Korea a civil war that ended? How about the confederates in the US? The Maori in New Zealand? What’s would you say about Yugoslavia?

    I think a lot of people see a difference between groups prancing about saying words, and the pragmatic situation.

    I’m not saying anything about the ideal outcome for any of those situations I’ve listed. Just that they’ve been stable for long enough they fit a definition of “ended”, even if over time that situation does change a little and that internal civil wars have a habit of forming new nations even while some groups hold onto the past


  • Sure for isolated machines. I was using open office on isolated machines 20 years ago, I’m glad the software is better now.

    But there is value in cloud storage for institutions and collaborative editing. All the European offerings I saw for this were autoconverting to Microsoft formats (pcloud, onlyoffice) and they both seem to have at least part open source licenses so it’s surprising to me.

    Its also surprising to me that there are mostly viewing options on iPhone (but not surprising to me that there is low support, just that it’s almost only view only)


  • Yeah, I get why Microsofts formats are entrenched

    I don’t so much get why they aren’t mostly export formats since:

    1. A proprietary format seems like it would be more error prone to use as the only format you edit documents in
    2. I presumed there would be some overhead like fees to using microsoft formats
    3. With governments caring more about digital sovereignty, I thought there would be better placed suppliers

    I guess #3 will just take time and to them there is risk that Trump leaves and everyone goes back to Microsoft














  • I have wanted to transform things

    I didn’t know how but it seemed possible. I searched and didn’t quickly come up with an answer.

    I asked an LLM, and it gave me a confident answer.

    I checked the man for the tool and the LLM had used creative writing to create the interface I expected should exist… but it did not exist.

    I don’t know how you’re swapping or merging these basic facts:

    1. If you’re told the binary and the flag, the validation of the LLMs output is fast (either with man or executing the command)
    2. If you have a process you’re searching for then the searching can be slow to find the combination of commands and flags (and that’s why so many people, by the sounds of it yourself included, use LLMs)

    I do think a “linux tutor” is one of the better use cases for LLMs for beginners, since you can quickly validate when its recommended commands are incorrect (but you still can’t quickly validate if its description of internals is misleading). I just think it falls apart as you start requiring more specialised things, or are at a situation where “this should exist” because the LLMs habitually make things up that sound reasonable to fill in the gaps in what the tools can do. That’s not an issue for beginners / the basics especially if there are lots and lots of tutorials the LLMs are sourcing from (although, that opens ethical issues too)