I’m intrigued. What’s the brand/model?
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Thank you for the link! I actually came across these in my research, but I was annoyed they didn’t have any sample sounds online, and then my shopping fatigue (which is easy to trigger) kicked in. I’ll have to double back once I have more energy because I think you’re right, they do seem like a good prospect.
I think I have more contact with people outside of my timezone than within, so I relate. I often think I wouldn’t mind everyone switching to UTC. Even if that means I do things consistently at “odd” times, like go to bed at 10:00, wake up at 18:00 and eat dinner at 06:00.
At least we’d all be referencing the same clock. When I travel, I’d just change what time i woke up, not the clock itself, which would give a sense of changing global position. And if we still wanted DST we’d just agree to do everything an hour later and perhaps realize it’s ridiculous and stop doing that.
I have enjoyed the chime of many mechanical clocks. Finding a reasonably priced one with the features and a style I like is the challenging part. This may be the ideal solution; I just slow-burn the search and try other suggestions in the interim. Thanks!
Good idea. I have HA running on an old laptop. If I had a smart speaker, I’d be tinkering on this now. If I can find one that meets my particularities, I might go this route. Thanks for the suggestion!
I am most of the day. It might not serve all my needs, but it’s a great option. It’s going in my bookmarks and I’m trying it now. Thanks!
You’re onto something-- I could set each clock one hour apart and set the alarms to the same hour. That way, I don’t have to change 24 clocks twice a year; I just look at one clock for daylight savings time, and then look at a different clock during standard time. Bonus: I label the other clocks with their respective time zones.
pemptago@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•swww renamed to awww, due to the author's guilt from obliviously naming it "final solution"English
17·2 months agoAlso moved to codeberg in the process. Bonus
Brilliant. I’ll just turn off the alarms for 8 of them at night, but keep them around in case my schedule changes.
Yeah-- it’s one of those things that was everywhere when I was younger: school, my grandparents’ home, nearby church-bells (I once had a job/shift that started when emergency sirens were being tested at 1pm every Saturday). It was background noise I took it for granted. After a number of moves and lifestyle changes I seem to have lost most audio time-cues without realizing it. And it’s been years before I realized.
Whoa, this is a trip down memory lane. My grandma had this clock (and probably ADHD). idk if it’ll fit the look of our place, but I like the idea and I appreciate your recommendation.
pemptago@lemmy.mlto
Privacy@lemmy.ml•Encrypt your Linux with LUKS, like seriously.English
2·3 months agoIt’s easy-- if you install on a single drive. If you want home on a separate drive, encryption is not so easy, and you have to learn about cryptsetup, crypttab, etc. Quite a steep learning curve compared to the installer. I do hope distros provide better coverage of this in the future. Having home on a separate drive and encrypted is just good practice.
pemptago@lemmy.mlto
Science Memes@mander.xyz•Happy 20th anniversary to the Corrupted Blood incident!English
48·3 months agoAfter several failed hotfixes, Blizzard ended the pandemic by performing a hard reset, and a later patch prevented companions from contracting Corrupted Blood entirely.
Note to the future: next pandemic, try a hard reset.
Seriously though, it’s wild they couldn’t hotfix it.
Looking like recursion with organs: all organs placed inside a large-intestine-like animal. And if it swallowed a mouse, another set of organs, and if that mouse swallowed … etc
pemptago@lemmy.mlto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Introducing reitti: a selfhosted alternative to Google TimelineEnglish
2·6 months agoThis looks awesome! I’d just been collect my GPS data thinking one day I’d analyze/visualize it on my own-- not expecting anyone else to make a such a comprehensive program. The UI looks really slick. I’m looking forward to testing it out. Hopefully this weekend. Thank you for this!
pemptago@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Alright fine I admit it, I want to learn LinuxEnglish
1·6 months agoThat’s a big question, but I’ll try my best to answer without getting too deep in the weeds.
I’ll probably sound like a fanatic, but I use my PKMS for notes, logs, journaling, project and task management, snippets, and documentation. They all have their own structure and flow. It’s a Gall’s Law kind of situation where I started simple and it worked, so it was extended and slowly evolved to reach it’s current complexity.
The beauty of PKMS over a notepad is the loose set of basic features (Wiki-links, tags, templates, etc) that be used in a personalized way to quickly capture, organize, and retrieve info that works best for you and no one else.
As a simple, but detailed example, in the context of learning linux, i might make a “linux” note and dump info there. I put everything in my own words unless I use md quotes (
> quoted text) and I add useful links that I also bookmarked in my browser. When the “linux” page gets bloated, I migrate clusters of info into new notes, wiki-linked in the “linux” note. For example a “distros,” note which might have some high level comparisons. I favor making new notes over md headers so it’s easier to find and open notes by name (a “quick switcher” hotkey as it’s called in obsidian). When I settle on a distro I might make a note for it to contain wiki-links of default components EG “apt (package manager),” “gnome (desktop environment),” “x (windowing system)” and dump relevant notes there. If I try wayland, I’d make a “wayland” note but also a “windowing system” note that both wiki-links “x (window system)” and “wayland,” and is wiki-linked in each of those notes.It could get very meticulous, and some folks setup is too much for me, and I’m sure mine is too much for others, but start simple, experiment, find what works, and add to it. In the beginning I had dedicated time just to developing my PKMS. The important thing is quickly recording and retrieving info.
Sometime i do have crazy scrawlings where i just need a notepad to dump info during a deep dive. That would be loosely zettelkasten style with a time-stamped name, sometime with a few extra works for context/search. Sections could be extracted into their own note later. The note itself could be linked to more organized, related notes.
As a more complex, but shorter example, to show how similar tools can be used in a different manner: I’ll make a note for a command line program, for example, cat. I have a CLI template with a Useful Flags (options) section. Kind of like a personalized tldr. I’ll also have specific notes for complex snippets (AKA one-liners. Real note example: “list-and-sum-all-audio-file-durations”) and if it uses cat, i’ll tag it
cmd/cat. The CLI template also has a Snippets section that uses dataview to automatically list, in this case, all notes with thecmd/cattag. I also have a “command line programs” note that uses a dataview query to list all notes that used the CLI template. Also, a Snippets note using dataview to list all pages created with the snippets template.There are tools specifically for snippets and personalized tldr, and I may migrate to those eventually-- especially after I have my install script up and running with linked configs-- but the simple tools in PKMSs are really adaptable and make it easy to customize and integrate. Plus it’s all md files in a folder, so it’s easy to sync and access on multiple machines, including mobile.
I hope that’s not TMI. Starting linux can feel overwhelming and I don’t want to add to that. Quiet the contrary. I started my PKMS right before my last, permanent switch linux and I think it helped it stick, and 3+ years later I still use [my PKMS] all the time. As I said before, the simple tools that turn a notepad into a PKMS can add a personalized structure to the insane scrawings, making it quick and easy to navigate, find, edit, and add info. You just have to start simple and take your time. I hope that helps. Good luck with the switch!
pemptago@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Alright fine I admit it, I want to learn LinuxEnglish
1·6 months agoI use Obsidian. Stores everything in markdown and has a nice sql-query-like plugin, dataview, that I’ve built a nice workflow around. Obsidian isn’t FOSS, which has become more important for me, so I’m looking to migrate over to markdown oxide in helix. If I were starting from scratch I might try logseq or similar. Whatever you choose, I think it’s helpful that it’s stored in a portable format like md so you can change programs if you need.
pemptago@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Alright fine I admit it, I want to learn LinuxEnglish
2·6 months ago- As others have said, it’s possible to play most steam games, but not all. You have to decide if you like those games more than you dislike MS and Goo. I find there’s so many great games out there that I’ll never get to all of them, so I’m ok with dropping some bangers that usually want too much access to my system.
- Here’s a useful resource if you need to understand slightly technical linux foundations https://linuxjourney.com/ It might not be necessary but it does help to have a foundational understanding, and honestly, the command line is awesome, powerful, and one of my favorite things about linux. Beyond having a basic understanding (and maybe having one of the books the site recommends on hand), before going to an LLM as others have suggested, have official sources of various components bookmarked and go there first. There’s so much BS out there now, I actually like the fact that I can read technical documentation, test it out, and know if it’s true.
one other tip: I’d recommend some kind of personal knowledge management (PKM) system to take notes. Linux gives you a lot of freedom-- that’s what’s great about it-- it can be complex and have a learning curve at times. It’s absolutely worth it though. It’s a totally different paradigm than windows. After a while you can really start crafting the whole system to your needs as an individual. I’m 3 years in and was using my first setup that whole time, i didn’t realize how customized I had made it until trying to set it up exactly on a new workstation. Now I’m writing a script so to automate my setup (os settings, program installs, configs) by running a single command. Then I can really start experimenting.
Everybody’s different and with a little basic knowledge, everyone’s setup can be tweaked to their individual needs a little better than other “user friendly/polished” operating systems. I hope you find as much joy and freedom in it as I do.
pemptago@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•List all existing program paths from your Bash's history. (Bash One Liner)English
4·6 months agoAs I’ve been working on an install script for making my setup more portable, this is handy and timely. Thanks for sharing!
PS I hate to be the UUOC person. I’m sure you’re already aware and it was a deliberate choice.

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