Enstrayed

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Enstrayed

Enstrayed

@Enstrayed

windows vista truther

Katılım Mayıs 2019
203 Takip Edilen69 Takipçiler
Enstrayed
Enstrayed@Enstrayed·
@sycawah you go through their replies and the irony is immeasurable
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Enstrayed@Enstrayed·
See ya later, Seattle I like the Link
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Enstrayed@Enstrayed·
@sycawah I don’t mean to alarm you but they turned you into a marketable plushie
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Enstrayed@Enstrayed·
went to go speak to oomf @sycawah but he wasn’t in today
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Enstrayed
Enstrayed@Enstrayed·
@chucker @rkobylinski No, there’s no reason to make Classic Mac OS apps function as X clients. On OS X it would make sense if you already had a Unix app to port.
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Ei ssörrender (formerly Office)
@Enstrayed @rkobylinski Sure it makes sense. There’s no reason you couldn’t make Mac apps output their UI over the X protocol. It’s not a trivial effort, and comes with downsides, but would’ve also provided the networking upside of X11. But this did not do that.
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Enstrayed
Enstrayed@Enstrayed·
@chucker @rkobylinski It’s not that the above couldn’t support ‘local’ apps, there just weren’t any because it wouldn’t make sense.
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Enstrayed
Enstrayed@Enstrayed·
@october_skyler @SapphoSys Haven’t tested but it should transfer at whatever the connection speed between both devices is. I haven’t personally noticed any unexplained slowness while using it.
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Skyler
Skyler@october_skyler·
@SapphoSys ohhh I forgot about this function! Is file transfer speed good though? Had issues with similar services, either broken file transfer or low speed ;(
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Enstrayed
Enstrayed@Enstrayed·
@CrazyWeeMonkey @suchnerve If you have NVENC or QuickSync you should always be using it over software encoding. AV1 is better than H265 and you should use it if possible; it’s more supported than you probably think.
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CEO of Antifa
CEO of Antifa@CrazyWeeMonkey·
@suchnerve If you need to re-encode into smaller files X265 is definitely worth the encode time over X264 nowadays. Also if willing the AV1 encoders in modern GPUs (e.g. RTX 4000+ NVENC) are on par with X265 from my experience but much faster, just check if your playback devices support it.
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Vivian
Vivian@suchnerve·
Plex server supremacy (I can stream like it’s Netflix, but the quality is Blu-Ray because it’s a direct rip from a physical disc - and furthermore, nobody can remove anything from my server without my permission, so shows and movies never disappear when licensing changes)
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

Your Netflix "4K" stream and a 4K disc put the same number of pixels on your screen. But the disc version of a two-hour movie is about 70 gigabytes. The stream is about 14. Same pixels, roughly five times less data filling them. You see it first in dark scenes. The stream doesn't have enough data to tell dark grey from black, so your TV just mashes it all into chunky blocks. Then you notice sunsets looking like a paint-by-numbers, with visible stripes where smooth color should be. Film grain is probably the biggest casualty. Directors add that slightly textured look on purpose to make movies feel cinematic. Streaming compression reads it as noise and wipes it. That's where the weirdly plastic, waxy look on a good OLED comes from. One comparison I can't stop thinking about. A regular 1080p Blu-ray (the older HD format, not even 4K) pushes about 40 megabits of data per second to fill 2 million pixels. A 4K stream pushes 15-25 to fill 8 million pixels. Four times the pixels. Less data. A plain HD disc from 2008 can look sharper than a brand new 4K stream. Sound is worse. Netflix sends "Dolby Atmos" audio at about 768 kilobits per second, compressed, with parts of the original permanently deleted. A disc sends TrueHD Atmos at up to 18,000, lossless, nothing removed. Up to 23x more sound data. If dialogue sounds flat when you're streaming, that's not your speakers. Netflix is getting better at this. As of late 2025, 30% of their streaming runs on a newer compression method called AV1, the same picture at a third less data. They also strip film grain out before compressing, then rebuild it on your TV during playback. Saves over a third on file size for most content, and up to two-thirds for really grainy movies. The rebuilt grain looks solid. The tradeoff won't go away, though. Netflix has to deliver a file that works over spotty rural Wi-Fi and gigabit fiber, adjusting quality frame by frame to whatever your connection can handle. A disc reads plastic. Same quality every time.

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Enstrayed retweetledi
The Frustrating Individual
face ID has recognized me in moments i wouldn’t have recognized myself
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Enstrayed
Enstrayed@Enstrayed·
@XolotlVtuber @TechX1320 @xdadevelopers No, a component of systemd manages the database of system users; an *optional* field was added to this database for the users birthdate, that’s it. The very idea of requiring an age check before the system starts is so ridiculous that it would be immediately rejected.
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XDA
XDA@xdadevelopers·
CachyOS just dethroned Arch Linux on ProtonDB, and Linux gamers are finally noticing bit.ly/4rYoGJd
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Enstrayed
Enstrayed@Enstrayed·
@mageofyuri @BOROWSKl @The_CultOfVenus The only reason those IP location sites sometimes work is because people allow location access on websites from a device that can precisely find itself (usually a phone) and then that location & IP are logged together.
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Enstrayed@Enstrayed·
@jane666defender @BOROWSKl @The_CultOfVenus This isn’t true v6’s do not automatically give you full location details and PII of the person using them, they’re no different than v4’s in this regard v6’s are more specific in the sense that they are almost never shared, so can be directly associated with a single device
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Enstrayed@Enstrayed·
@crilly_jim @Rand_Introvert @spider623 @xdadevelopers Hilarious game of telephone in this thread * The windows bootloader could easily be updated to boot ReFS, probably already has * No system firmware can read NTFS, for obvious reasons, hence a FAT32 EFI partition * Legacy boot does not matter since everything is UEFI now
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Jim Crilly
Jim Crilly@crilly_jim·
That's just straight up wrong. Maybe you're thinking of the EFI partition, but that's an EFI requirement. Grub directly boots Linux just fine from nearly all of it's native filesystems. Same for Windows. In BIOS/Legacy mode, there's no need for any FAT32 partitions. #Features" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">gnu.org/software/grub/…
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XDA@xdadevelopers·
ReFS is better than NTFS, but Microsoft refuses to let regular users have it bit.ly/4cPOun5
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