[-] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 7 hours ago

10 years ago, all I wanted was a brick-sized phone with a battery that won't quit. Now that we have cheap and reliable portable power banks, it's dropped down on my priorities list.

I guess a 22Ah battery would have a longer effective lifespan, too. I mean, if it drops to 50% capacity after a few years, that's still more that double most phones. So that would potentially solve my longevity issue.

[-] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 8 points 10 hours ago

This link is more Lemmy-friendly: !signalgroups@moist.catsweat.com (note that you might need to refresh the page after loading it, if this is the first time someone is loading it on your Lemmy instance).

[-] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 3 points 11 hours ago

Typically, I use a slow-charger overnight (a plain ol' USB type-A charger, which I think means 5W max), then top-up as needed during the day with USB-PD fast chargers. I generally do not top up to 100% during the day. I have adaptive charging enabled in settings.

That said, I'm a heavy phone user, and I've never had a phone that reliably lasts me a full day. According to aBattery, my current phone is at 750 charge cycles, which is just about 1 per day since I bought it. I'm not up to date on all the latest developments in battery tech, but I think it's normal for a battery to drop to 80% of its original max charge after 500 cycles. I don't think I have a dud on my hands, just an ordinary battery that is aging as expected. Like I said, it's still "fine". It hasn't started unexpectedly shutting off or anything like that.

I still have my old Pixel 2 (now 7 years old) that I occasionally use as a wi-fi device. I used that phone heavily for 2 years and very lightly for the remaining 5. I'm lucky if the battery lasts half an hour at this point; it's basically a desktop device now.

[-] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 19 points 12 hours ago

Also works on Twitch with the added benefit of NOT playing ads (you still get breaks, just with a placeholder screen instead of the commercial).

mpv has yt-dlp support built in, so it can just play the streams directly.

[-] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 10 points 12 hours ago

vd (VisiData) is a wonderful TUI spreadsheet program. It can read lots of formats, like csv, sqlite, and even nested formats like json. It supports Python expressions and replayable commands.

I find it most useful for large CSV files from various sources. Logs and reports from a lot of the tools I use can easily be tens of thousands of rows, and it can take many minutes just to open them in GUI apps like Excel or LibreOffice.

I frequently need to re-export fresh data, so I find myself needing to re-process and re-arrange it every time, which visidata makes easy (well, easier) with its replayable command files. So e.g. I can write a script to open a raw csv, add a formula column, resize all columns to fit their content, set the column types as appropriate, and sort it the way I need it. So I can do direct from exporting the data to reading it with no preprocessing in between.

[-] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 3 points 13 hours ago

Yeah, I've replaced phones in the past that were perfectly fine except the battery was terribly degraded. With an iFixIt repairability rating of 2 stars and a new battery costing more than the phone was worth, it just didn't make sense to fix it.

My current phone is only two years old and while it's still "fine", the battery life is noticeably lower than it used to be. I doubt it'll remain useful for another two years.

Many brands now provide software support for longer than the hardware will remain useful (thanks to non-removable batteries). Strange times!

[-] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 36 points 14 hours ago

Consumers partly killed replaceable batteries by demanding things they couldn't deliver. Waterproofing

Ehhhh...no, not buying it. We had water-resistant phones before the switch to non-removable batteries. For example, the Galaxy S5 (the last Samsung flagship with a removable battery) had an IP67 rating. The current Galaxy S24 has an IP68 rating. Go ahead, ask your average consumer what the difference is between IP67 and IP68, and how much they care.

Oh yeah, and the S5 also had a headphone jack and SD slot. You can do all these things and still have water resistance, so let's all please stop perpetuating these myths. If you're not on Apple's or Samsung's payroll, you do not need to lie for them.

[-] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 16 points 4 days ago

Mathematicians: "First time?"

My experience might be a bit outdated, but I remember finding the default Mac OS X Terminal extremely slow. A few years back I ran an output-heavy command, and the speed difference between displaying the output in terminal vs outputting it to a file was orders of magnitude. The same thing on my Linux system was much, much faster. I'm not sure how much of that was due specifically to rendering, vs memory management or something else, though.

I might see if I can still reproduce this in Sequoia and if Ghostty is faster on Mac.

[-] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 344 points 7 months ago

Nobody tell her about daemons.

[-] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 181 points 11 months ago

Buying anything on Amazon hardly seems viable anymore. There's so much counterfeit crap there, and a million low-effort rebrandings of the same stuff you can get on AliExpress for cheaper.

Shop local when you can, and at least shop not-Amazon for the rest.

1
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org to c/sdfpubnix@lemmy.sdf.org

Edit: This appears to have been fixed already with another backend update. Leaving the post below as-is.

Current version in the footer: UI: 0.19.0-rc.11 BE: 0.19.0-rc.10

Starting today, most image thumbnails and pictrs links will not load. I tried clearing cookies and I tried in three different browser engines (Firefox, Chromium, Safari).

If I try to open one of the image URLs directly in my browser, it shows {"error":"auth_cookie_insecure"}.

Interestingly, images will load correctly if I am NOT logged in. Why are the pictrs URLs even checking cookies when they do not require auth? Is that new behavior in this version of Lemmy?

Here is an example post: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/8482278

And an example direct image URL from that post: https://lemmy.sdf.org/pictrs/image/c8556f4f-d33c-4cac-86f3-975726ea69ec.png

I am interested to know if others are seeing the same issue. I have not exhaustively tested different cookies settings in my browsers, so it's possible some anti-tracking privacy settings are interfering with this behavior.

Worth noting is that the Eternity app on my phone continues to work. I did not even need to log out and back in today, like I did in my browsers.

[-] GenderNeutralBro@lemmy.sdf.org 184 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Not once in the entire article do they measure energy in a unit suitable for measuring energy.

Measuring batteries in km is misleading and nonsensical. Batteries do not have a distance range. Cars have a distance range, based on many factors, only one of which is battery capacity.

Similarly, please stop measuring light output in watts that an imaginary incandescent bulb from 30 years ago might theoretically have used to produce that amount of light.

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GenderNeutralBro

joined 2 years ago