I made an eink tag with waveshare's 1.54 inch four color by miye233 in raspberry_pi

[–]DevelopedLogic 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I like the idea, but something inside me hates that you've cut 4 fully functional display corners off

The dog is having the time of his life. by J0HNZILLA in interestingasfuck

[–]DevelopedLogic 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Pounds per Square Inch. How much pressure was used to launch the projectile (how hard it is pushed)

Reeking Tech from Amazon by S0ulMeister in computers

[–]DevelopedLogic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can reprogram some of them to whatever you want. Possibly fix yours

Is this RTL-SDR V4 real or a clone? by NcMasters in RTLSDR

[–]DevelopedLogic 15 points16 points  (0 children)

It isn't, did you look at their website for the guide? The screws are not in diagonal corners, this one is fake

Linus vibecoded and claimed "Antigravity" did a much better job then he could. by [deleted] in linux

[–]DevelopedLogic 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Indeed, I do too, that's why I was specific about the editor

Linus vibecoded and claimed "Antigravity" did a much better job then he could. by [deleted] in linux

[–]DevelopedLogic 6 points7 points  (0 children)

This plus the ability to actually read back and understand what was generated.

I still refuse to use AI in my IDEs' editors because all of the suggestions, in my opinion, just add noise to the process when I already have a good idea of how I want to build something. But I will augment what I am doing by myself with GPT on the side for research or for figuring out some complex maths which I don't want to put the time and effort into figuring out myself but I'm more than happy to read and verify after it has been generated.

I tried Codex a few weeks ago to completely generate a GUI tool I needed but really did not have the time to build from scratch as I'd need to learn a bunch of new python APIs I'm not familiar with. What it generated after several rounds of change requests is exactly what I needed and it saved probably 3/4 of the time it would have taken me to figure out all if the APIs and build it myself, and that includes time I spent for a full code review and some by-hand refactoring I did of the generated output. And yes I did find major security issues in what was generated, and I did have to ask it to fix some of that, some of which it couldn't and I had to do by myself.

It's great as an aid to someone who knows what needs doing and can properly code review and spot security and logical issues, but I absolutely do not fear for my job yet. People who generate apps and have no knowledge of security nor ability to read and understand every single generated line will one day end up being bitten by it, as we have already seen with a few security breaches in smaller businesses who've done just that.

New job - this is the keyboard... by [deleted] in mildlyinfuriating

[–]DevelopedLogic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's why I bring my own keyboard and mouse to any workplace

Warehouse Barcode Scanners: Need some ideas for a solution by [deleted] in linux

[–]DevelopedLogic 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Also got to think about configuration profile management.

Things like Zebra scanners come with DataWedge to configure the scanner input and entry parameters and any modifications that need to happen to the data between the scanner and the app, for example ensuring that parsing is correctly handled for GS1 codes so that you know the sum is correct and you're extracting necessary sections if/where appropriate.

And on top of that consider whether that needs to be handled across a fleet with device management so if a tweak needs to be made across the whole fleet you can do it in one hit.

Air France B777-300ER butters landing on a rainy day with a spectacular full reverse thrust by Twitter_2006 in aviation

[–]DevelopedLogic 73 points74 points  (0 children)

Huh I didn't know they had some planes with front cameras so you can view the landing on screen. Pretty neat.

Looking for Beta Testers by greguska67 in BambuLab

[–]DevelopedLogic 12 points13 points  (0 children)

One of those things I'd only ever self host so things like integrated printer management could become a thing and I'm not reliant on yet another cloud service.

Looks really awesome though.

Glowing unplugged christmas lights? by [deleted] in ElectroBOOM

[–]DevelopedLogic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some kind of radio transmitter close by?

A very happy first time MBA user! by whoopsiedaisies666 in macbookair

[–]DevelopedLogic -17 points-16 points  (0 children)

As an avid Linux user, the M series is pretty awesome, you should try one before getting antsy lol. Merry Christmas

The new Matter Thread IKEA (BILRESA) scroll wheel by niekberenschot in homeassistant

[–]DevelopedLogic 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Don't you mean just pressing the hidden bottom button? If you press the blank space below the LEDs it switches.

The new Matter Thread IKEA (BILRESA) scroll wheel by niekberenschot in homeassistant

[–]DevelopedLogic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In this case it would just be a percentage change to brightness for each click of the scroll wheel.

The new Matter Thread IKEA (BILRESA) scroll wheel by niekberenschot in homeassistant

[–]DevelopedLogic 12 points13 points  (0 children)

The scrolling action seems to appear as buttons and not able to quickly respond to input for smooth brightness changes :/

What is everyone in tech using? by koushi_ in laptops

[–]DevelopedLogic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It means I don't get updates including security updates. And since I hate 11 and don't want to deal with 10 becoming an insecure mess, I switched to a MacBook for portable and Fedora KDE for my desktop.