
Despite the timeline we currently live in, The Onion is not a reputable source of information.
Please delete and repost to !theonion@midwest.social
Sadly The Onion needs to up their game. It’s sad that the NYT often reads like them.
Despite the timeline we currently live in, The Onion is not a reputable source of information.
Please delete and repost to !theonion@midwest.social
Sadly The Onion needs to up their game. It’s sad that the NYT often reads like them.
Libre Office should work in most cases. In the handful that Libre Office can’t you might try installing MS Office through WINE.
One heads up, even MS Office on Windows has trouble with opening MS Office formats correctly between versions. Seems like every time they release a new version the format changes slightly but dramatically. The actual text is usually fine, but formatting is often borked.
A third option is to use Office 365. It’s browser based. It’s also a monthly subscription.
You don’t have to but it helps folks that don’t speak English to be able to filter by language. English speakers seem to be dominant in the undetermined category from what I’ve noticed.
Thats a new one on me. What did that do if I may ask? Best I have been able to figure out is that it’s probably IRC related but that’s it.
I’m inclined to say no. It pretty much a useless feature and doesn’t solve the fundamental problems of searching a federated service like Lemmy.
Even if LLMs worked like the general public thinks they should, who would pay for the processing time? A one off request isn’t too expensive, sure, but multiply that times however many users a server might have and it gets real expensive real quick. And that’s just assuming the models are hosted by the Lemmy server. It gets even more expensive if you’re using a one of the public APIs to run the LLM queries.
Canonical? the US could try but Canonical isn’t a US company so far as I know. The attempt would probably just piss off their “home” nation. That would be the UK, I think.
Red Hat is another story though. It’s owned by IBM which is a US company, which means it is, in theory, obliged to obey any lawful order of the US government. I say “in theory” because there is a long history of companies here saying “Yes sir, Yes sir, Three bags full sir.” and then doing whatever they want when no one is looking anymore. For examples see Facebook, Google, OpenAI, Exxon IBM, Coke, Ford and… Well just about every company that has been around for more than 20 years and most small businesses to boot.
Practically speaking, though. These companies are based around open source projects whose source code has been widely distributed. If you need to, (or hell, even if you just want to) fork them, rename the project to avoid trademarks, and move on. Whether you flip Uncle Sam the bird as you do so, your call.
I also attempted a semi-successful build of Gentoo on a PPC Mac around the same time (nothing before or after that has compared in its level of nightmare).
Amen!
Both are great if you’ve got a keyboard or can use one, but they aren’t quite the same usecase as GoodNotes. GoodNotes is more a PDF annotation software but with bell and whistles added in that make it more functional as a digital notebook, with document scanning and web collaboration tacked on as well.
I’ve been looking for a suitable replacement for 3 years but everything I’ve tried has been short of the mark.
Not stable yet according to the devs but there is Immich.Lot of folks seem to think it’s stable enough though.