

I hate to break it to you, but the diaeresis (two-dots diacritic) is, in fact, a standard part of modern English orthography.
But yes, I was lazy when writing. I’ve slapped myself on the wrist.


I hate to break it to you, but the diaeresis (two-dots diacritic) is, in fact, a standard part of modern English orthography.
But yes, I was lazy when writing. I’ve slapped myself on the wrist.


Well in that case it should hardly be a concern then.


TIL six year olds use Lemmy.


The Turkish Government decided that they’d like the English translation of their name to be Turkiye, and asked the world nicely.
The world, for whom it is absolutely no inconvenience whatsoever, went “fair enough, sure.”
If the majority of people are now writing Turkiye, it just means the majority of people are not utterly wearisome bellends; consider this a rare good news story.


That’s an incredibly longwinded way of saying “mahh Tezlur burns three times as much ‘clean coal’ per mile as a commie BMW, yee-haw”.


The article is from a UK newspaper. What is and isn’t legal for them to regulate is decided by their Parliament and nobody else. No Kings, and all that.
Meanwhile, you should know that the “free speech” lectures are getting pretty old from the country that checks social media history at the border to make sure you didn’t say anything bad about the Dear Leader, which shuts down TV shows it doesn’t like, and generally ensures the media toes the party line.
(See also - lectures on why kids shooting up schools is a necessary price to pay for that well regulated militia that will be along to save you from tyrants, well, real soon now…)


Advanced Vector Extensions instruction set; introduced with Sandy Bridge in 2011, but not included in Pentium/Celeron branded processors even after then for reasons best known only to Intel.
Mongo is the application that has most irritated me by requiring it, but I doubt it’s the only one.


Just throwing this in here as another thing to consider - instruction set. From a quick check (so I’m happy to be told I’m wrong) the Celeron & Pentium options don’t support AVX. That means some stuff - and I’m giving a hard stare at MongoDB here, but there will be others - is not going to run, or at best you’re going to be either stuck with old versions or recompiling yourself from source.
(I don’t know if any of your apps require Mongo or AVX, but I was bitten by this in the past and it was one of the main reasons I eventually upgraded one of my small clusters.)


Shutting down comments and banning everyone who calls them out is standard form for that place these days sadly; I deleted a 13 year old account there a few years back when they posted some godawful transphobic opinion peace and then they doubled down in the comments and started banning anyone who complained.
Shame, it really was once a good site, but the writers who are left are the ones who got high on their own supply years ago.


I worked for Philips Research 30 odd years ago (weeps)… It was a source of great amusement then that we could sell two pieces of equipment that were identical in every way except one had a Marantz label and cost twice as much as the Philips one, and the Marantz would get 5 stars in the audiophile magazines, and the Philips would get 3 or 4.


That hasn’t been true since 2018. (And in my experience (about a decade working at Sky), not that you’ll believe me, there was practically zero influence when it was - not least because James Murdoch had very different views to his father.)


Ah damn, I loved that book when I was a kid. I can probably blame it, at least in part, for my career…
(I was a massive nerd and a FidoNet sysop back in the 80s & 90s, and got my first VMS and Unix experience hopping onto academic networks over dialup and X.25 gateways using, err, “unconventially obtained” credentials… This experience helped me convince my interviewer at Imperial College to overlook my less than stellar academic record to admit me to their Computing peogramme.
That book - and the movie WarGames - were definitely inspiring, if not life-changing.)


Kiwix is the easiest way to do it; if you have Docker/Kubernetes, there’s a Docker image at ghcr.io/kiwix/kiwix-serve, and the K8s manifest to deploy is as simple as:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: wikipedia-service
spec:
selector:
app: kiwix-server
ports:
- port: 80
targetPort: 8080
clusterIP: None
---
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: wikipedia-server
labels:
app: kiwix-server
spec:
replicas: 1
selector:
matchLabels:
app: kiwix-server
template:
metadata:
name: wikipedia-server
labels:
app: kiwix-server
spec:
containers:
- name: kiwix-server
image: kiwix/kiwix-serve:3.8.0
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
command:
- /usr/local/bin/kiwix-serve
- --port=8080
- --verbose
- /data/wikipedia_en_all_maxi.zim
ports:
- containerPort: 8080
protocol: TCP
volumeMounts:
- name: data
mountPath: /data
readOnly: true
limits:
memory: "128Mi"
cpu: "2000m"
volumes:
- name: data
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: wikipedia-mirror
Then you just need to download a copy of the mirror file wikipedia_en_all_maxi.zim and put it in the appropriate place - wget https://download.kiwix.org/zim/wikipedia_en_all_maxi.zim


Annnnnd that’s why I downloaded a snapshot of Wikipedia a few months ago and host it locally.
Sad that it’s necessary, but with modern AI tooling, we have everything we need to destroy knowledge on an industrial scale.


I gave up with MacOS a couple of years ago (after nearly a lifetime of using them - my first ‘own’ Mac was a Lombard PowerBook G3 - lovely machine,) because it became increasingly apparent that Apple had stopped caring about the desktop operating system and were intent on turning it into a mobile phone with a keyboard and bigger screen.
Annoying desktop bugs - like constantly (and randomly) forgetting the resolution and position of second displays, not powering up external USB drives properly after sleep, and (as a developer) endlessly having to fight with “why is my build suddenly broken? oh, MacOS decided it doesn’t trust the linker again” type problems just wore me out. Every time they released some pointless new UI fluff but ignored the fact that the Finder had been essentially unusable since Mac OS X (because why should you be using the Finder anyway, you should just trust that your files are stored in Magic Apple Cloud Land…) just reminded me they really didn’t care about desktop users, they just want desktops as accessories to their mobile phones.
So, I cut the cord and finally switched to Linux on the desktop. Which is a shame, because they do make some really nice hardware…
(Although now that I’m actively trying to cut all US suppliers out of my life, it’s actually been a blessing.)


This is a very good point - in books/dramas it helps the exposition to have a character you can relay half the plot details to. Similarly in radio dramas, every conversation between characters starts with saying each others names and a full recap of whatever the subject is… But nobody in the real world does or wants to talk like that.
Real people just say “hey, is that thing fixed yet?”, not “hello Chris, you remember yesterday we were discussing the il problem with the Thing, and you proposed Cornfootling it; what happened?”
When I want Alexa to turn on the lights, I want to just say “Alexa, turn on the lights”, not have a goddamned debate. And when I want to search for whatever the hell Cornfootling is, I just want to type “Cornfootling” and hit search.


China’s VPN blocking is actually very, very effective, and the vast majority of people don’t go around it.
And that’s kinda the point - the controls don’t have to be 100%, they just have to cover the majority. And for the few that do circumvent - well, that’s just one more easy crime for the authorities to charge you with if they ever feel the need.
Yeah, that’s not very typical, I’d like to make that point.
I live in (Eastern) Europe.