
Unless you consider murrsuits a subset of fursuits. Those will have… strategically placed holes.
I like computers, trains, space, radio-related everything and a bunch of other tech related stuff. User of GNU+Linux.
I am also dumb and worthless.
My laptop is ThinkPad L390y running Arch.
I own RTL-SDRv3 and RSP1 clone.
SDF Unix shell username: user224

Unless you consider murrsuits a subset of fursuits. Those will have… strategically placed holes.

Depends on the use case. If thousands get separated, 69,420 looks nicer. If you want a port number, only 42069 is valid.


This seems like it’s for sharing same keyboard and mouse between multiple computers. What I am looking for is for the secondary laptop just to act as a monitor. That’s it. It could just be a video stream of a virtual monitor.

Reminds me of VirtualBox on Wayland. It won’t correctly capture the mouse, so it just exits and re-enters the window in random positions. Say, on guest you see it in middle left, you move it a bit to the right, and it jumps out of bottom right corner.
So, time to have a second mouse, and do USB passthrough.
But also UEFI on my HP mini PC doesn’t work with every keyboard, so a second keyboard for UEFI.

KDE Plasma has that too. It’s funny, the cursor just keeps growing while you’re shaking it. Slowly, you can eventually cover the whole screen.


What I mean is the mouse cursor isn’t there when I move it over there. Well, isn’t visible. It still interacts with objects.
Same as this person’s issue: https://discuss.kde.org/t/show-cursor-on-virtual-display-kde-connect-krdc/43421

Sorry, I don’t really understand what’s going on in here. I just clicked because I’ve seen boykisser :3
Anyway, based on some of your posts, you might find !onehundredninetysix@lemmy.blahaj.zone and !femcelmemes@lemmy.blahaj.zone interesting.

And my… where did I put it again? Shit, I always forget.


please take a look and tell me what you think
Sorry if it seems like I do, but I in fact do not have a brain.
I just found this tool gets the job done, and that’s it.
I typically just use it in a pretty stupid manual way.
local$ waypipe -c zstd=6 ssh username@IP
remote$ export DISPLAY=:90
remote$ ./xwayland-satellite :90 &
remote$ xfce4-panel
Even the xfce4-panel discovery was an accident.
I was using waypipe before knowing about xwayland-satellite. I wanted to run an X program, so in the same shell I typed vncserver to, well, launch a VNC server. That invoked xfce4-session, BUT since the WAYLAND_DISPLAY was set, XFCE DE attached to waypipe rather than XTigerVNC, launching a full remote desktop over my local one.
And out of that, xfce4-panel proves pretty useful. I can easily launch other programs using GUI, and also see widgets on that panel.
Here’s what I mean, if that sounds confusing:

Plasma panel (bottom) is local, XFCE panel (top and middle bottom) are remote.
Right, and you’re probably wondering why that app launcher at the top looks shattered. Well, both can’t be opened at once. If the application launcher goes out of focus, it closes.
But also, I use the shatter effect in KDE Plasma, so it doesn’t go away immediately. This is just as close as I could get with screenshot timing.
I use it as a fallback when Catbox is down.
I typically can’t use it either, but it seems to still cover majority of users.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
int main(){
while(true){
printf("Oh shit!\n");
}
}


I’ve been checking around the used market for DDR4. It seems used ECC DDR4 sticks are now cheaper due to low demand.


Time to make a compromise by buying the cheapest €130 8GB stick.


We have that available, I just use mobile data because I disagree with their ToS.
The ToS is so restrictive that you basically immediately break it after connecting a device. I was told that, of course, they don’t really care.
Except - there is a point stating the provider has the right to access your computer if there is a suspicion of ToS violation. Considering the network here is a student-run organization, that could easily be exploited if you piss off someone.
Maybe I am just paranoid, but no thanks.
Otherwise, from talking with them, most dorms have 1Gbit, some have 2.5Gbit, and all share a 40Gbit link which could apparently do 100Gbit (I think), but it’s capped due to licensing.
They leverage national academic network.
Oh, and they also got a class B subnet back when everyone was sure there’s just way too many IPv4s, so NAT isn’t being used here.


> Live on a dorm
> There’s lots of people
> Cell towers are motherfuckingly overloaded during the day
> 0.09Mbps down, 4.5Mbps up and > 300ms on 4G


That was where I went “holy hell”. Wearing out ports is something I am constantly quite scared of when plugging things in. Especially things like cables when they want to twist vertically, but the port is horizontal, and, well, it’s a thick cable, so…


Literally. Repairability used to be expected.
I use this one: https://f-droid.org/packages/com.vrem.wifianalyzer