AnExerciseInFalling

joined 1 year ago
[–] AnExerciseInFalling@programming.dev 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

The pinebook's privacy switches (for WiFi/BT, camera, and microphone) operate at the firmware level, the operating system has no control over them

https://wiki.pine64.org/wiki/Pinebook_Pro#Privacy_Switches

The keyboard operates on firmware independent of the operating system. It detects if one of the F10, F11 or F12 keys is pressed in combination with the Pine key for 3 seconds. Doing so disables power to the appropriate peripheral, thereby disabling it. This has the same effect as cutting off the power to each peripheral with a physical switch. This implementation is very secure, since the firmware that determines whether a peripheral gets power is not part of the Pinebook Pro’s operating system. So the power state value for each peripheral cannot be overridden or accessed from the operating system. The power state setting for each peripheral is stored across reboots inside the keyboard's firmware flash memory.

A couple of favorites that are different from what others already said:

  • I strongly dislike autorotate on my phone so I always keep it off, however it makes perfect sense in apps like YouTube/Twitch. So I have one task that turns it on when opening one of those apps, and off again when closing them
  • When I've got Bluetooth headphones, I can choose to have incoming texts read out to me. Very nice when walking/running outside and not needing to pull my phone out
  • Similarly, I've got a task that will (optionally) read out the name of the song that's playing to Bluetooth

Buzzkill is very nice. I'm in a group chat that gets huge bursts of activity (like a hundred messages) and then goes dormant for a bit, so I set buzzkill to only give me at most 1 notification every 30 minutes, and keep the rest of them silent. That way I can still keep up with it without my phone blowing up

I could be completely wrong, but I think one of the first anomaly detection games was called "I'm on observation duty" which came out in 2018, but didn't really get popular until late 2021 (when the fourth game in the series same out), about the same time "The exit 8" released funny enough.

That game is a little different where the player flips around security cameras and reports anomalies as they come up, but I think exit 8 was the first anomaly detection games that is "looping" and you have to decide whether to go forward or back depending on if there's an anomaly

[–] AnExerciseInFalling@programming.dev 50 points 1 week ago (8 children)

Humans evolved finger nails to separate Lego pieces

...I can't think of a good reason for toe nails though

[–] AnExerciseInFalling@programming.dev 4 points 1 month ago (4 children)

Just waiting for the achievement reenabling mod so I can play with some of the real nice QoL tweaks

[–] AnExerciseInFalling@programming.dev 2 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Still very cool to think about

And thank you for the app link, if I ever get flexible enough hours I wonder if that sleep schedule would help my somewhat unhealthy relationship with sleep

[–] AnExerciseInFalling@programming.dev 5 points 4 months ago (3 children)

I definitely agree some of the issues they cite are more complicated than they need to be

It would be awesome to base schedules around sunrise (especially sleep, your routine sounds very nice), but the wild variance the further you go from the equator might make that unruly.

Depending on the time of year my schedule would "shift" around multiple hours due to latitude, people in (southern) Norway would have to shift around 6ish hours, all the way to the extreme arctic circle where the sun doesn't rise/set depending on season

I think I could adapt where I live, but I feel like "time of day" would lose all meaning without also knowing time of sunrise, whereas right now I can be reasonably certain how "active" the world is in any given timezone at 9:00 or 23:00

It is definitely interesting to think how different it would be to base everything around sunrise (you'd never really say let's meet at x time, it would always be relative to sunrise), I just struggle in thinking people would be able to break the routine of relying on nice round numbers for time

[–] AnExerciseInFalling@programming.dev 37 points 4 months ago (7 children)

As much as timezones are a pain (I'm a programmer who recently finished working on an international calendar for an app), I don't think getting rid of timezones is a great idea. https://qntm.org/abolish

I think a much better goal would be getting rid of daylight savings. THAT causes so much headache for little reason nowadays

Ack librefm completely slipped my mind

AFAIK they're two separate projects for the same/similar goal. I know ListenBrainz has a recommendation system, but it might still be in it's early days

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