OneCardboardBox

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OneCardboardBox, (edited )

I’ve been trying to include failure techniques from DungeonWorld’s suddenly ogres in my game. It proposes a few neat ideas for consequences of failure that are broadly applicable to many RPG systems.

Eg, in the example above, maybe the Rogue (truthfully or not) blabs that their source was [ancient evil tome forbidden by the paladin’s order]. Now the complication is not that the Paladin disbelieves the rogue’s claim, but that they might question the rogue’s true intentions.

Edit: Or in the example given about landing a plane. An experienced pilot won’t crash 1/20 times, but what if Air Traffic Control did a bad job managing things today? It will take 1h for the plane to be assigned to a gate, but you need to catch the train to Borovia in 1h15.

An award winning surgeon rolls a 1 while giving a routine lecture? The presentation is so fucking boring that half the students fall asleep. Now the surgeon has to deal with the extra office hours of students who don’t understand this part of the curriculum.

New GM: Player wants a new character early in the game

We’re 3 game sessions deep into a Vampire the Masquerade chronicle. I’ve just heard from one of my players that they feel like they’ve put a bit too much of themselves into their character, and they’re starting to get uncomfortable with it. As such, they’d like to roll up a new char sheet and bring their current...

OneCardboardBox,

Unless they specifically asked me to do this, it would feel like twisting a knife in the player. If they tell me that they feel like the character is too connected to their IRL personality, then turning them into an NPC would make the problem worse. Not only might they still feel like the character is a reflection of themselves, but now they can’t even exercise control over the actions of that character, thus possibly internalizing those actions negatively on themselves. Best case scenario: they think I’m an asshole. Worst case scenario: they take it personally.

Is it just me, or has the BS with OpenAI shown that nobody in the AI space actually cares about "safeguarding AGI?"

Money wins, every time. They’re not concerned with accidentally destroying humanity with an out-of-control and dangerous AI who has decided “humans are the problem.” (I mean, that’s a little sci-fi anyway, an AGI couldn’t “infect” the entire internet as it currently exists.)...

OneCardboardBox,

I think there are real concerns to be addressed in the realm of AGI alignment. I’ve found Robert Miles’ talks on the subject to be quite fascinating, and as such I’m hesitant to label all of Elizier Yudkowsky’s concerns as crank (Although Roko’s Basilisk is BS of the highest degree, and effective altruism is a reimagined Pascal’s mugging for an atheist/agnostic crowd).

Even while today’s LLMs are toys compared to what a hypothetical AGI could achieve, we already have demonstrable cases where we know that the “AI” does not “desire” the same end goal that we desire the “AI” to achieve. Without more advancement in how to approach AI alignment, the danger of misaligned goals will only grow as (if) we give AI-like systems more control over daily life.

OneCardboardBox,

The stop button problem is not yet solved. An AGI would need a the right level of “corrigability”: a willingness allow humans to stop it when undertaking incorrect behavior.

An AGI that’s incorrigible might take steps to prevent itself being shut off, which might include lying to its owners about its own goals/internal state, or taking physical action against an attempt to disable it (assuming it can).

An AGI that’s overly corrigible might end up making an association “It’s good when humans stop me from doing something wrong. I want to maximize goodness. Therefore, the simplest way to achieve a lot of good quickly is to do the wrong thing, tricking humans into turning me off all the time”. Not necessarily harmful, but certainly useless.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=3TYT1QfdfsM

OneCardboardBox,

how can an application ship with wayland?

It can’t. The title is not clear about how Firefox will “Ship with [support for] Wayland [compositors] by default”. Previously this native support was limited to pre-release Firefox builds.

What if the DE you’re using is on x11?

Firefox continues to support X11.

OneCardboardBox,

Does that mean we no longer have to use an envvar to get Firefox as a native Wayland window?

Precisely

issues with QbitTorrent stalled torrents

I am just getting back my sea legs, but apparently they’re pretty shaky because I can’t get my ubuntu torrent (no seriously, it is) to download. It never starts downloading and is stuck in “stalled”. I’ve tried a number of things, but even with default settings it isn’t starting. I’m using proton VPN on Linux Mint,...

OneCardboardBox,

Does the user running qbittorrent have write access to the downloads directory? Any special messages in the logs?

You might also want to try running qbittorrent through docker. I use github.com/DyonR/docker-qbittorrentvpn. Just make sure that you set the PUID and PGUID to match a user id + group id that has r/w access to your downloads directory.

OneCardboardBox,

Looks like an annealer in a glass blowing studio.

OneCardboardBox,

I like my bag-endian architectures

OneCardboardBox,

Jiraffe: another terrible product from Atlassian

OneCardboardBox,

I think that’s not the problem that this technology is intended to solve.

It’s not a “Is this picture copied from someone else?” technology. It’s a “Did a human take this picture, and did anyone modify it?” technology.

Eg: Photographer Bob takes a picture of Famous Fiona driving her camaro and posts it online with this metadata. Attacker Andy uses photo editing tools to make it look like Fiona just ran over a child. Maybe his skills are so good that the edits are undetectable.

Andy has two choices: Strip the metadata, or keep it.

If Andy keeps the metadata, anyone looking at his image can see that it was originally taken by Bob, and that Fiona never ran over a child.

If Andy strips the metadata (and if this technology is widely accessible and accepted by social media, news sites, and everyday people) then anyone looking at the image can say “You can’t prove this image was actually taken. Without further evidence I must assume that it’s faked”.

I think spinning this as a tool to fight AI is just clickbait because AI is hot in the news. It’s about provenance and limiting misinformation.

OneCardboardBox,

There’s no accounting for adoption, true. Seems like the use cases still have value though: c2pa.org/specifications/…/Explainer.html#_use_cas…

As for licensing, the specs are released under Creative Commons, so anyone should be able to implement it.

OneCardboardBox,

I don’t quite get why some of those cases require universal adoption. News photos: You just need one big news company to say “we’re giving all our photographers a camera with this tech” and then it serves its purpose.

You see a headline “SHOCKING photo published by MegaNewsCorp will send you into a coma!” then you can validate that it came from a MegaNewsCorp photographer. If you trust MegaNewsCorp, then the tech has done its job. If you didn’t trust MegaNewsCorp already, then this tech changes nothing. I think there is moderate value in that, overall.

The story of this tech is getting picked up and thrown around by bad tech journalism, being game-of-telephone’d into some kind of game changer.

Plenty of open standard live and die by whether or not one big player decides to adopt them.

OneCardboardBox,

So then news orgs who care about provenance have to stop copying social media posts and treating them like well-researched journalism. Seems like a win to me.

OneCardboardBox,

You gave an example of TMZ sourcing photos from randos, but they’re likely not the target customer for this tech. If they cared about integrity they wouldn’t be reporting celebrity gossip.

For news companies posting syndicated images, then those come from a cadre of photographers who are most likely to own the newest most expensive cameras. Surely it’s not inconceivable that as this tech rolls out more, Agence-France-Presse, Getty, or AP could require all photos submitted to them to have this metadata, thus passing the benefits along to any news agency using their images.

If you’re talking about photo sources taken from everyday people, then yes: They won’t have this technology in the short term, maybe not ever. Then again, I don’t get my news from TMZ.

I think blockchain is dumb because it fails to achieve its stated goals while also harming society. I think this is a system with marginal use case and minimal licensing overhead to integrate into future cameras, so overall my take is “not dumb” and “probably useful”.

The Paperweight Dilemma: Original Pinephone might lose future kernel updates if devs can't pay down tech debt (blog.mobian.org)

I think I’m reading this blogpost correctly: Mobian devs working on maintaining Linux kernel support for Pinephone painted themselves into a corner with tech debt, and may not be able to continue porting new kernel updates. Pinephone Pro runs a different chipset with wider community support, so it’s not affected....

OneCardboardBox,

There is hope. I was once as you described: Coffee ice cream tasted foul, and even tiramisu was too much for me. I would have an occasional sip of someone’s coffee drink just to see if my tastes had changed and I always hated it. Then one day, my boyfriend made coffee using a French press, instead of the drip that he normally made. I tried a sip and it as if a switch had flipped. No cream, no sugar, just a really damn good cup of coffee. Now making (and drinking) coffee and espresso are among my favorite daily routines.

OneCardboardBox,

EMH was designed to be a doctor, not a janitor. I bet a lot of the work behind EMH was in proving mathematically that it would not harm patients (while at the same time, understanding that some temporary harm might be needed to save a patient’s life). We see how core this is to an EMH’s identity when in Voyager, the doctor goes crazy after not being able to save a crew member.

Meanwhile, Moriarty had no safeguards. That’s part of why he was so dangerous to the crew of the Enterprise.

OneCardboardBox,

oh does this mean that one day we might play all of f:nv in a better game engine?

Yes, and that engine is called OpenMW. Don’t expect NV to be playable for a long time, though.

youtu.be/fwx2AW9A0Xc?si=QHzAZZ-dYXzW8nI9

OneCardboardBox,

rEFInd can auto-detect bootable devices, and you can select them during startup. You need to install it to the efi partition as your boot manager.

With a simple config edit and file copy operation, I put a memtest86 efi image on my boot partition, and it shows up as an option for every boot. It’s nice to know I won’t have to fumble around with USB drives if I need to test my RAM in the future.

OneCardboardBox,

I use Fedora Sericea, another Silverblue spin, on my laptop. It wasn’t hard to install rEFInd, and it coexists just fine with GRUB in my experience. rEFInd detects that grub is there and shows it as an option, like any other bootable media.

The rEFInd documentation at www.rodsbooks.com/refind is extensive, but the summary of how to install is

That was it for me, but the full installation steps are available at www.rodsbooks.com/refind/installing.html if you run into trouble.

The next time I rebooted, rEFInd popped up and I was back in Fedora with no problem.

OneCardboardBox,

The sweeping motion of a mechanical watch is somewhat incidental. Yes, higher-end watch movements will beat at a higher rate than cheap ones, thus making their motion more smooth and their timekeeping more accurate. However, after a certain price point (let’s say, >1k USD) that ceases to be a factor and choices like material, brand, complications (aka “features”), and finish make up most of the expense. Beyond that (>100k USD), you get to the price point of watches as high end art.

Anyway, for me as a tech guy, it’s about style and simplicity. I want a beautiful, legible dial in a form factor that doesn’t make my wrist look like a toothpick. I have a compulsion to always know the time, while also wanting to disconnect from my phone for certain things. A smart watch is too phone-like for me.

OneCardboardBox,

I’ll believe that it’s a contender against existing quartz movements when they lay out the production costs for their design. You can’t consign discrete ticks to the dustbin of history until you can compete with a $3 SpongeBob watch from Malaysia.

OneCardboardBox, (edited )

There’s some setting in sonarr/radarr, I think it’s called “remote path mapping” or something. If you have different mounted volume paths between the torrent container and sonarr, you need to set this:

Suppose:

  • Baremetal host has directory /mnt/myfiles
  • Your torrent container mounts /mnt/myfiles/torrent_downloads to /downloads
  • Your sonarr container mounts /mnt/myfiles/torrent_downloads to /data/torrent_downloads and /mnt/myfiles/shows is mounted to /data/shows (for copying completed files)

You need a directory mapping to tell sonarr that the path in the torrent container is different from the path sonarr should look. Torrent client says “I have a new show to copy, it’s in /downloads”. Sonarr doesn’t have /downloads, but if you set up the path mapping, it knows that /downloads on the torrent client is actually equivalent to /data/torrent_downloads in sonarr. Thus, in the sonarr container, it copies the file from /data/torrent_downloads to /data/shows.

OneCardboardBox, (edited )

distrobox: Tool for creating one-off containers of a different Linux distro.

container: A virtual OS environment that runs on your computer, but doesn’t know that it’s running in your computer. It’s not the same as a VM or emulator.

flatpak: A tool designed by RedHat for running sandboxed Linux programs in any environment. Flatpak can either refer to the system as a whole (eg: “You need to install flatpak on your machine to use our tools”) or an individual program packaged for the flatpak system (eg: “You must download the latest flatpak of Firefox”).

AUR: The Arch User Repository. A collection of installation scripts to add software to Arch Linux. These scripts are not owned or maintained by anyone officially affiliated with Arch, so you can find AUR packages for almost anything.

So, the comment becomes: Stick it in a dedicated environment designed to run Debian. Then package it so anyone can run it. Then make it easy for anyone running Arch Linux to install it.

OneCardboardBox,

I don’t know about useless.

I’m much happier now that my work laptop slows down when I compile something during a zoom meeting, vs when it used to run out of memory and crash.

OneCardboardBox,

Agree with the other user that using tar and then zipping the tarball will preserve permissions.

Alternatively, you could open an ssh connection and rsync the files between machines.

Last option would be to export your recipes from the old host, build a new container from scratch on the new one, and import them back again: docs.tandoor.dev/features/import_export/

OneCardboardBox,

The user and group id inside the container doesn’t have to match any user on your host machine. It’s possible that user:70 is configured as the user to launch inside the container, in which case you should set the ownership of the directory to match what the container expects.

Eg: The container for my torrent client runs as user 700 group 700. My host machine does not have either of those IDs defined. My torrent directory must be chown’d by 700:700 or else the container can’t read/write torrents.

OneCardboardBox,

Have you checked for compatibility with the programs that are crashing? Before you go through the effort of installing everything, it’s worth checking if anyone else got it to work: appdb.winehq.org

As for upgrading, that would depend on the distro you’re running. What do you use?

OneCardboardBox,

Yes. Are you using Arch? Install kernel-modules-hook

Some distros have something similar enabled by default.

OneCardboardBox,

It moves the old kernel modules to the right location for the old kernel to still find them after you’ve upgraded. When you restart the system to use the new kernel, the old kernel module symlinks are cleaned up.

From what I understand, live kernel patching is only recommended for critical security fixes to server environments where you can’t just boot off every user. wiki.archlinux.org/title/Kernel_live_patching

OneCardboardBox,

Happened at my workplace. An phishing email went out to test how likely people were to click the link.

Anyone who clicked the link had to take phishing training. Anyone who forwarded it to our internal “hey this is a phishing email” service also had to take training… because the internal service would automatically click the link.

OneCardboardBox,

Nobody is asking the important question: does it crunch when you eat it?

OneCardboardBox,

Try the VueTorrent web UI. I use it on both mobile and desktop

OneCardboardBox,

Poor guy can’t get any relief from his Kronos’ Disease

New to America USA, how do you socialize and meet new people?

I recently moved to the USA, from the middle east. My English is pretty good, and I don’t have a lot of trouble communicating with people at work or in stores. I also don’t know anyone here at all, outside of work. All my family is still back in Gaza, and I’ve been here over a year now, and still feel cut off from American...

OneCardboardBox,

The type of hobby club you join will impact how easy it is to meet people: Something like a hiking club is good, because you have to drive to the destination (free conversation if you car-pool with other members) and then there is the opportunity to talk to people during the hike itself.

OneCardboardBox,

I only go with SI units: Gigabucks

Anyone in possession of a billion dollars is a Gigabuckaroo

OneCardboardBox,

I bet you can buy indulgences to be root

I Tested an HDMI Adapter That Demands Your Location, Browsing Data, Photos, and Spams You with Ads (www.404media.co)

An iPhone to HDMI adapter was discovered that, when plugged in, runs a program prompting users to download an app. This EZ Cast app collects extensive personal data and sends it to China for ad targeting. It requires location access, photos, and installs tracking cookies. The adapter appears designed to mimic official Apple...

OneCardboardBox,

Universe-wide destruction of machines “designed to do the work of a human mind”.

It’s the reason why there aren’t any computers in the Dune novels.

Films and shows which tell the story of how they themselves were produced

In The Office (US version) it is revealed that the mockumentary the viewer watches does in fact exist inside the universe. Dunder-Mifflin crew is even interviewed as stars of the show and Pam has a thing for the boom mic operator who worked on the set....

OneCardboardBox,

The Japanese film One Cut of the Dead: I don’t want to explain too much, but if you want a movie that takes this concept to the furthest degree then you should check it out.

OneCardboardBox,

I actually like the QR button. It detects them faster than my phone’s default camera app, and since I already know I’m going to open a link, it’s nice to not have to switch apps.

What I really want from fennec is the ability to selectively wipe browsing history over a long period of time. I changed the domain of a service on my home network years ago, but the address bar always suggests the old domain because it’s a substring of the new one, and thus a “better match”.

My options are to scroll through years of history and individually remove every occurrence of the old domain… or wipe my entire browning history.

OneCardboardBox,

Policy is 7 day rotation, 24h a day. Must be available to respond within 30m.

  1. ~$800 US a week. More if there are holidays. Get paid even if no incidents occur.
  2. I get phone and Internet reimbursement that normal devs don’t get.
  3. There’s supposed to be a policy where if I get paged between 10pm and 6am, I don’t have to show up to work for 11h. It’s not strictly followed in my team, but I always try and get my value from it.
  4. 7 others, so I’m on-call for 1 week every 2 months.
  5. Job is US based, but company is EU owned.

I’m an SRE though, so our on-call is different from on-call for our product devs.

OneCardboardBox,

Only in the one episode where they serve together on a Klingon ship during the dominion war: …fandom.com/…/Sons_and_Daughters_(episode)

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