As far as I can tell, that *something* just doesn't exist.
Is that accurate or have I just missed some super obvious solution :akko_what:
This client is technologically illiterate and moving to Spain for a couple of months; he wants us to do things on his iPhone in Spain from the US.
We're looking at building a super jank contraption so he can set his phone in it, plug in a cable, and go away. There will be a webcam pointing down at the phone so we can see the screen (no third-party screen recording on iOS) and the cable he plugs in will emulate a mouse and keyboard. We'll VNC into the Pi and a Python (:neofox_x_x:) script will capture mouse movements/keystrokes and relay those to the iPhone.
I really don't want to build this shit if something already exists. Please tell me I'm dumb and point me to something that already exists.
Reminder to admins: if you see a problematic user on a particular instance and are about to defederate from said instance solely because of said user, don't assume that the user is representative of the instance as a whole and immediately defederate from them. Instead, look around the instance's timeline and contact the admin, giving them a couple days to respond. If it becomes clear that the user *is* representative of the instance as a whole and/or the admin just doesn't care, guns away :flan_guns:
I actually use the affiliates listed I list on NixNet. They didn't contact me to gRoW tHeIr BRanD or anything like that; I used the service for a while, decided others might find it useful, looked for some kind of affiliate program, then signed up for it myself. https://nixnet.services/affiliates/
I derive genuine value from them, they're not just marketing spam to pump some crappy startup.
> Websites on the internet are constantly trying to get you to complete actions. Whether it's buying something, reccomending a friend or posting private information, there is a lot of value in getting you to perform specific actions. However, some websites go too far and try to trick or mislead you into doing what they want. This has led to what are called "Dark Patterns", or shady ways of tricking you into performing actions without you knowing.
> It's important that you are aware of these patterns, and so below are a list of dark patterns with interactive examples. The more you know, the more control you will have.
Amolith (amolith@nixnet.social)'s status on Monday, 14-Mar-2022 19:20:12 UTC
AmolithDoes anyone know of a good way to theme a desktop in a more adaptive way? At night, I definitely prefer using dark themes, but I'm thinking about switching to light themes during the day. With my current setup, that would require manually editing a bunch of configs, logging out, and logging back in, which isn't great.
I would be perfectly fine with something like a script that overwrites variables in configs and restarts those apps but that's a lot of work to create myself :akko_thonk:
I don't want any organisation, tagging, cloud, etc. features, just something akin to imagemagick that reads the PDF, does the OCR magick, then spits out the OCRed PDF to a separate file.
I don't mean your specific friend group, I'm talking about the general population at large.
I think this is a personal stereotype I've developed and I'd like to find out how accurate it is (or isn't) from people who actually live there :blobfoxthink:
Crawling finished, ingest finished, and server is running. Try it out and let me know if you think it's worth setting up long-term :comfy: https://wip.secluded.site
(might be a little slow because it's running on my PC in the US and proxied through my server in Finland over WireGuard)
This has become my public/announcement account for things related to NixNet, blog posts, streams, and so on. I'm moving pretty much everything else over to my Misskey account: @amolith@mk.nixnet.socialMisskey is *fantastic* software and I really encourage you to take a look at it :cyannyan_heart: https://github.com/misskey-dev/misskey