@clementd It depends tbh. I think the longest I've done is about 6 hours straight and it's a little more tiring than my ultra wide but not too much more. I use it as a complement to my deck's screen for when I don't wanna be looking down at my lap.
@Gmaclennan Maybe! :o Is this on top of hyperbee?
@clementd Nice, yeah. I wonder if rokid will make a MacOS app for virtual desktops eventually the way Xreal did. Also! Before my steam deck I used to use my intel nuc with an apple magic trackpad and a portable monitor. The gestures were pretty useful there.
@clementd Defs something smaller would be easiest imo. Even a samsung phone with DeX can be convenient
@clementd Ah! I don't use the Rokid app or their spatial stuff at all. The glasses end up just being an external display. Train is defs a good use case. I use a Rii i8+ as my main keyboard and it's been great. Especiallt not needing a surface to place it on. defs slower to type than my KB380 tho. https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005004629223236.html
@clementd Honestly it'd be hard to get me to shut up once I've started 🤣
If I look at very bright stuff it can be hard to see the text since I have everything in dark mode, but even then I don't really use the covers. I just sit down and look at the grass or lay on my back and look at a tree. Sometimes I walk around with my partner and do code reviews while they help keep me from bumping into stuff or getting hit by a car 😁 It's a great way to get weird looks tho.
@clementd @j3rn @lpil Hmm, net yet but I really should. I find the best part has been the ability to lay on ny back while coding and generally get more comfortable. Sometimes the text needs to be zoomed a little and the glasses need to be adjusted a little to be able to see the edges of the scrern properly. The diopters are very convenient as a glasses haver and friend of glasses havers :P
@lpil For more context I mostly use my deck for programming in node.js, golang, python, and rust. I've also had to get some c++ stuff compiling and that's been a lot more annoying when jugglinf system libraries and the homebrew installed gcc.
Most apps come in the form of flatpaks so that part has been mostly pain free.
@lpil TBH the read only FS hasn't been too bad. I've just had to install stuff in my home dir using stuff like homebrew 😁 It can be a little janky at times, but IMO less hassle than shoving everything in a container or distrobox.
@tychi Yeah absolutely, you can tarball any files and send it over. We have two methods for uploading, PUT and PATCH. POST replaces the entire site contents whereas PATCH adds any new files. The GH action only supports POST at the moment IIRC, but that should be a simple enough addition.
Honestly having a bitch of Bash in your script should do the trick just as well.
https://github.com/hyphacoop/actions-distributed-press/blob/main/src/index.js
i am available for software contracting work via my cooperative @emma! i have 10+ years of experience in game design and development on desktop/mobile/consoles, VR/AR, museum installations, compilers/language/VMs, front end/backend web development, and distributed systems -- among others. if you need software work done please reach out and i would love to figure out how i can be of service! you'll also be supporting a democratic worker-owned business in the process 💪
@thisismissem This is so cool, thank you for the link!
Link via @psilocervine on Cohost: Some investigative journalism inside Unity's road to briefly introducing a company-destroying "install fees" policy last month.
The most interesting takeaway here is the whole disaster really was just IronSource, who merged with Unity last year, puppeting the company into destroying IronSource's competitor AppLovin at all costs. An entire art form is a pawn to be sacrificed in a fight between two adtech companies you've never heard of
https://mobilegamer.biz/fuck-you-were-not-paying-inside-unitys-runtime-fee-fiasco/
@neauoire Yeah it'd be neat to do compilers or parsers or transformations over top of this stuff. The part about how to do concurrent streams is interesting.
As a profesional todo list (with extra steps) maker this is a useful development for me 😎👉👉
Occult Enby that's making local-first software with peer to peer protocols, mesh networks, and the web.
Exploring what a local-first cyberspace might look like in my spare time.