• taanegl
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        32 years ago

        Open source locally run LLM that runs on GPU or dedicated PCIe open hardware that doesn’t touch the cloud…

    • @[email protected]
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      302 years ago

      To be fair - people don’t know what they want until they get it. In 2005 people would’ve asked for faster flip phones, not smartphones.

      I don’t have much faith in current gen AI assistants actually being useful though, but the fact that no one has asked for it doesn’t necessarily mean much.

      • @[email protected]
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        112 years ago

        To be fair, in 2005 a lot of people dreamed of “mini portable computers that could fit in their hands”. They just didn’t associate it to the form created with smartphones, and when the smartphones came to be, people were amazed by it. I don’t see the same level of reception when it comes to AI assistants.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        faster flip phones

        I don’t think speed was a complaint anyone had about phones right before smartphones launched.

        People were mostly concerned with cell phone plans. Talking used to be charged by the minute, texting was charged per text, and data was practically non-existent.

        Cell phones have come a long way, but I think a lot of people take for granted just how much cell service has improved. I pay $25/month for a single line that gives me unlimited talk, text, and data (Visible). Couldn’t be happier.

        • @[email protected]
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          22 years ago

          I pay $25/month for a single line that gives me unlimited talk, text, and data (Visible). Couldn’t be happier.

          cries in Canadian

    • @[email protected]
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      152 years ago

      Would be a cool feature if it could be leveraged in a secure, private, efficient way that was more useful than 99% of the algorithmic monkey typewriter garbage that’s on the market these days. I don’t need a glorified Cleverbot rifling through my unspeakables.

      • ffhein
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        72 years ago

        Local LLMs are getting better at a very rapid pace. Still a bit too resource hungry to have running in the background all the time, but for example Mistral-7b is quite competent for its size.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      Definitely. It improved recently (like 2 last versions) and was a big thing when the fractional support was added, since now some software can finally be usable. But I still have too many problems regarding speed, animations, different sizes of things in different places, mouse cursors being wrong, crashes or lock ups sometimes happen, etc.

      But it’s getting there and am really hopeful for next version and how good it could be.

      Really want to finally be able to properly use my external monitor with the laptop monitor also connected at different sizes and fractional settings.

      • JustEnoughDucks
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        2 years ago

        It’s interesting nowadays. My windows 11 navigation bar on my work computer now crashes 10x as much as plasma Wayland does. Completely reverse of years earlier.

        Along with dozens of other problems like invisibly disabling the microphones so the only way to unmute them is to use the audio troubleshooter, my windows laptop gets more unstable with every update while KDE Wayland gets more stable with every update.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        and was a big thing when the fractional support was added

        I don’t get the need for fractional scaling. If you had bought nonsensical hw like a 4k screen in a 15" notebook, just change display resolution and maybe global font size?

        • @[email protected]
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          32 years ago

          And waste all those pixels? Scaling let’s you keep the sharpness while also getting reasonably sized ui

            • @[email protected]
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              12 years ago

              I didn’t downvote you

              The way I parsed your earlier comment was that the solution to making a resolution like 4k usable on a laptop was just to lower your resolution. My point is that if instead of lowering your resolution, meaning you’re not utilizing the full potential of your screen, you can instead use UI scaling to make the resolution usable while still benefiting from the higher resolution in terms of sharpness in text, games etc.

  • Captain Howdy
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    522 years ago

    A bunch of ai garbage and also some ads please! Maybe collect info about me and sell it to marketing corporations while you’re there.

  • Square Singer
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    432 years ago

    A consistent system settings app that actually handles all configs without requireing manual editing of config files.

    • falsem
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      232 years ago

      Which DE? With KDE I don’t think I’ve ever had to edit a config file. I do recall that being an issue with Gnome; it’s been years since I’ve used it though.

      • Square Singer
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        132 years ago

        XFCE is really bad with this. KDE is much better, but still when setting up something a bit more complicated, you are quickly back to reading man pages. And man pages really aren’t great.

      • BOMBS
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        32 years ago

        On KDE, if you want NumLock to start on at the login screen, you need to edit a file.

        Also, to remap mouse side buttons, you need to either mess with a config file or install something like Input Remapper.

  • @[email protected]
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    432 years ago

    Basically competent support for hardware for laptops newer than 2014. Proper thunderbolt, displaylink, trackpad, fingerprint reader, facial rec support.

      • @[email protected]
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        72 years ago

        My company insists on buying these shitty Dell DisplayLink docking stations. They suck so hard they are just a stupid expensive 90W charger. Even OS X users hate them. The frustrating thing is, these things were supposed to allow us to plug our laptop in anywhere and get two working screens, keyboard and charging. The only bit that works reliably is the keyboard and mouse.

        • @[email protected]
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          72 years ago

          There is a driver for it, but it bricks my OpenSuSE and stresses the CPU so much on OS X that it’s literally unusable.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          I wonder why Displaylink still gets used when DP alt mode has existed for many years now.

          We used Dell WD19 docks and they worked well enough. A bit buggy sometimes but a firmware update usually fixed it.

      • @[email protected]
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        62 years ago

        Yes however on windows and mac displaylink “sucks” on linux it is practically unusable. I do agree Dlink sucks, but modern laptops have no alternatives to speak of.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        Really? I find displaylink awesome I alternatively use ChromeOS, Linux and windows with no issues even gameing on windows (lowers the FPS but fine for my abilities)

        Curious what HW you are using I have a couple of different Dell DL models

        Linux on displaylink was iffy but it has been great the last few years.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 years ago

      That’s fair.

      I’m glad I don’t rely on any of that, personally. Aside from the trackpad, which works as it should.

    • taanegl
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      12 years ago

      You want open firmware, so this is not a DE problem.

    • voxel
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      12 years ago

      trackpads work fine on Wayland or wirh xinput2

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        I wish Wayland had support for multi-finger gestures. I know my System76 laptop’s trackpad supports them on Windows, but Windows is trash. I use them all the time on my Mac, but I just use a mouse on Linux.

        • voxel
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          2 years ago

          wdym, gnome and kde have 1:1 3/4 finger gestures and smooth scrolling OOTB.
          And it works GREAT!! much better then on win10!
          ONLY under Wayland though…
          if you’re using x11, you won’t get the gestures.

          • @[email protected]
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            12 years ago

            I’m using the latest Plasma on Wayland on Arch and NONE of those gestures work!!

            I am NOT using x11!!

            • voxel
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              1 year ago

              something must be broken then.
              thy work perfectly on both my 8 year old asus laptop and a new dell model from 2021

              • @[email protected]
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                2 years ago

                I have a System76 Kudu from 2018. I won’t buy anything from them again, honestly. It was overpriced for what it was, and the screen is awful. And it still has features that only work on Windows 10. Not at all what I expected from a company that claims to be Linux-first.

                • voxel
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                  1 year ago

                  afaik tuxedo laptops are great… but I don’t own any (and don’t need a new laptop rn) so idk
                  also maybe you need a legacy driver for your touchpad like xf86 synaptics

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    Remote desktop working like it does in windows.

    • easy to setup and use
    • can remote into a system that has been recently rebooted. Without needing to make the user auto login and set the keychain password to be blank.
    • resolution scales to remote client interface

    I love linux and it is really all I use but RDP support is severly worse than windows.

    • @[email protected]
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      172 years ago

      What do you need RDP for? I did everything i ever needed to do remotely via SSH (I mean this as a genuine question, not that we shouldn’t have better RDP support)

      • @[email protected]
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        102 years ago

        A lot of proprietary engineering software (CAD, MATLAB, etc) or GUI heavy programs have poor or no terminal interface to work with, so the need remote desktop solution is valid

      • @[email protected]
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        62 years ago

        I should be able to use my system wirelessly without having to connect it up. I was running baduk (weiqi/go) simulations on the GPU and I wanted to see live output on the board instead of staring at some SSH’d numbers

      • @[email protected]
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        32 years ago

        I can do anything I “need” to via ssh. But I would really like the convenience.

        At work they monitor web traffic and block vpns, but they dont block ssh. So I use an ssh tunnel to rdp to my home system so I can easily look something up, navigate to the web interface of one of my self hosted apps, or get a torrent downloading at home.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 years ago

        I dont know how to mount external drives on Bash without root privilegues. On the Desktop environment it can be done by just clicking without root password.

    • @[email protected]
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      62 years ago

      Setting up vnc is not as easy as it should be. I really wish it as just send auth, if auth create virtual display and perf devices as user that actually sends it to remote client, user sees desktop env loaded.

      • Captain Aggravated
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        22 years ago

        I’ve had various VNC systems fail to interoperate. Like you have to use the same server and client.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 years ago

      That’s my biggest issue so far. With RDP I knew I could hook up my cheap Android Tablet on my private network and RDP my way to stuff I forgot to do or I needed urgently. Now I can do similar things with SSH but I still struggle to use VNC without it breaking my gdm, and not even to the full extent I’d wish for.

  • suoko
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    2 years ago

    Kde, cast the screen wirelessly. The gnome app does work but it’s not integrated in kde display configuration

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    I just hope GNOME’s developers would stop being so insufferable. Lots of Wayland extensions and FreeDesktop portals unimplemented on GNOME because of the developers’ stubbornness. These also adversely affect to other DEs and WMs and Wayland’s evolution itself because other DEs would have less reasons to support a standard if one of the largest DEs themselves don’t support it.

    I really love GNOME because it’s polished, but if KDE would be just as polished I will immediately switch. I know KDE works really hard to make the DE and the apps in general as polished and modern as possible, but I can’t still help but feel better at GNOME.

    One example is the color scheming protocol by FreeDesktop. You can now make your apps look greenish or purplish or whatever color you want regardless of the toolkit they’re made with. Right? Well no, because the insufferable GNOME developers keep blocking the proposal because they want the colors to be hardcoded by the DE. They were offered a compromise where a DE can just offer a limited, curated color picker to the user when they go to the theming settings and allow any arbitrary color hidden behind commands, but the insufferable GNOME developers said no. And the proposal, last time I heard, is still stalled because of GNOME.

  • @[email protected]
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    252 years ago

    I really want to have better tiling and window management in Gnome. Ubuntu has an add-on released with 23.10 that I haven’t got around to test yet. And I know that Gnome has that feature in the works, but it annoys me that Windows 11 has better management of windows with window-snapping than my DE of choice.

    • @[email protected]
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      82 years ago

      I’m not a Gnome user, but I’m geniunely hyped for the new tiling feature. If KDE doesn’t get something similar soon I might change DE just for that.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 years ago

          The one the Gnome team is working on right now, as described here.

          The basic premise of rearranging windows at an optimal size, without stretching them out to fill fractions of the screen, seems like the perfect medium between floating and tiling.

    • Mister_Bennet [he/him]
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      12 years ago

      I use the forge extension, about 80% satisfied. Only issue I have is that all windows open on my second monitor and I have to move them.

      • CptKrkIsClmbngThMntn [any]
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        11 year ago

        I find I have that issue in Windows 10. There’s not much consistency between applications in terms of which monitor or even desktop they’ll launch in when I open them.