[-] rarkgrames@lemmy.world 5 points 7 months ago

If Kylie Minogue is in my bed it’s definitely a dream.

2

I've recently purchased a Samsung Q990C and so far I'm really happy with it. I want to get the best out of it and was hoping someone could give some advice on rear speaker placement.

My room is a strange shape, but basically where I sit I have my TV in front with the soundbar underneath. My sofa is on the other side of the room, a little distance from the wall behind me, enough that I am able to place the rear speakers just behind me and to each side, around ear level (ish). However, there is no wall on mi right side as my room is L shaped, so there is nowhere for the right rear speaker to bounce the audio from it's side speaker back in to the room.

What I was thinking was I could change the setup in the Samsung SmartThings app and put the rear speakers in to front speaker mode, and swap them over so the Right is on the Left and vice-versa. In my mind, this would mean the side-facing speakers on the rears would be facing in to the room rather than out, but would be on the correct side.

Would this cause any major issues in terms of the audio? I'm thinking this could affect the upwards firing audio but would it really be that much of an issue? Would I be better off just having the speakers in their "correct" positions with the right one firing on to open space?

If it helps the distance from my seating position to the TV is approx 4 - 5 metres.

[-] rarkgrames@lemmy.world 8 points 1 year ago

Ah, the greatest nation in the world

/s

[-] rarkgrames@lemmy.world 14 points 1 year ago

Porn for people who like poop

[-] rarkgrames@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago

Seeing as it was supposed to become free to cross 20 years ago…

[-] rarkgrames@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

It’s the clbuttic problem, also known as the Scunthorpe problem.

See also: particitrousers

[-] rarkgrames@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago

I absolutely hate SO. It’s my last resort when looking for help, and I’ve never signed up.

Between snarky arseholes, the “already answered here” comments even when the question isn’t the same, and people saying “dw i solved it” and never stating how they solved it the whole place can just fuck of.

[-] rarkgrames@lemmy.world 7 points 1 year ago

WhipperSnapper, you are fined one credit for a violation of the verbal morality code!

[-] rarkgrames@lemmy.world 8 points 1 year ago

I quite enjoy Quinn’s videos on Snazzy Labs.

[-] rarkgrames@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Not sure if it fits your requirements exactly but I just put a service behind TwinGate and it works well for my usage case. I can allow my wife secure access to services she needs to access from anywhere securely - she just opens the app to connect and she can access what she needs.

I haven’t but you can enable 2FA, as well as restricting based on things like hardware, OS and whether a device has biometrics.

[-] rarkgrames@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Drag and drop would be useful. Editing the conf.yml file isn’t too bad unless you accidentally mess up the spacing but I make backups before editing just in case.

Now I’ve got it pretty much how I want it I’ll probably only be editing the config every so often. Adding new items is easy enough in the GUI, it’s only really widgets etc where I had to get my hands dirty.

6

I installed Dashy a couple of days ago and have got things pretty much how I want them I think. There is more off the bottom of the screen but this screen shot shows the main things I need.

I've set the stats widgets to auto-collapse on load so they don't take up the entire screen, and I'm pulling those from Glances running on my ProxMox server.

Really impressed with Dashy, and how easy it is to configure and customise.

2

I decided to spin up Home Assistant on a VM on my server yesterday, and so far I'm not having much luck getting to to much that is actually useful.

I'm wondering if it's me doing something wrong, but I can't see what that would be.

I've signed up for the free trial of the cloud services which all seems to have gone fine, and I have a couple of integrations working (Roomba, printer ink levels, Sonos and a couple of others) but mostly everything else I've tried just doesn't want to play ball

  • Apple TV - won't pair - I press the pair button in HA but the ATV doesn't respond with a pairing code

  • Ring doorbell / cameras - these are found but won't display a live feed

  • Ring alarm - not recognised at all

  • Netatmo thermostat - widget displays but doesn't sync correctly with thermostat and if I try to adjust temp it sets the target temp to 137 degrees C

  • Hue lights - having issues but this one might be my hub not HA

I was really hoping I could set up automations to, say, turn off my TV, turn off the lights, arm my house alarm - all with one press of a button but it looks like currently this isn't going to happen.

Is it just me? Am I doing something wrong perhaps? Maybe I'm missing something obvious but it just seems like the integrations with these devices just isn't quite there? I'd really be interested in other people's experiences and whether they were able to solve these issues (if indeed they had them at all).

[-] rarkgrames@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

I really love this one:

https://www.3djake.uk/fillamentum/pla-extrafill-wizards-voodoo

I did the “black” pieces for a chess set in it and they look so cool.

I did the “white” pieces in this:

https://www.3djake.uk/fillamentum/pla-crystal-clear-iceland-blue

2
submitted 1 year ago by rarkgrames@lemmy.world to c/memmy@lemmy.ml

Good luck with the App Store submission. Hopefully you’re not stuck in “Awaiting review” limbo for too long.

0
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by rarkgrames@lemmy.world to c/programming@programming.dev

Over the last year I've been learning Swift and starting to put together some iOS apps. I'd definitely class myself as a Swift beginner.

I'm currently building an app and today I used ChatGPT to help with a function I needed to write. I found myself wondering if somehow I was "cheating". In the past I would have used YouTube videos, online tutorials and Stack Overflow, and adapted what I found to work for my particular usage case.

Is using ChatGPT different? The fact that ChatGPT explains the code it writes and often the code still needs fettling to get it to work makes me think that it is a useful learning tool and that as long as I take the time to read the explanations given and ensure I understand what the code is doing then it's probably a good thing on balance.

I was just wondering what other people's thoughts are?

Also, as a side note, I found that chucking code I had written in to ChatGPT and asking it to comment every line was pretty successful and a. big time saver :D

Edit: Thanks everyone for insightful and considered replies.

I think the general consensus is basically where my head was at - use it as a tool like you would SO or other resources but be aware the code may be incorrect, and the reality is there will be work required to adapt and integrate with your current project (very much like SO) and that's where you programming skills really come in to play.

I think I still have imposter syndrome when it comes to development, which is maybe where the question was coming from in my mind. :D.

2
submitted 1 year ago by rarkgrames@lemmy.world to c/cat@lemmy.world

This is my gorgeous Maine Coon, Hudson. He's 1 year old today and as you can see he's really pleased with his birthday collar.

18
Hudson says blep (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by rarkgrames@lemmy.world to c/cat@lemmy.world

This is Hudson, one of my Maine Coons. He’s nearly 1 year old and he’s a little bugger but we love him.

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rarkgrames

joined 1 year ago