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What are you even talking about? Android is by far the most popular mobile OS worldwide. It's only in the US where iPhones are dominant.


Nvm I can't read


Looks really cool! I've also been experimenting with cyberpunk-y looking ui but this is far cooler than what I've come up with. Although it's funny seeing hints of material design poking through since i kinda associate MD with a lot of corporate dashboards.


thx!

haha, you're onto me with material design (which I really dislike), because it's built into Flutter, which I'm using for this, in a lot of places. BIGCORPO is onto us ;)


Tiny nit-pick: onclick="document.getElementById('modal').showModal()" in yellow box 3 seems to not allow word breaks, overflowing the page


Did i read that right? What part of a debugger would require the use of an AI language model?


Hey, yeah I know sounds weird. We're experimenting with small custom models <1B params to figure out which part of your code you'd probably not want to instrumentalize the normal way (e.g. logging absolutely everything) and instead in a more tailored way (and what that tailored way is), for instance a python for loop with 10k iterations.


You can run SteamOS on a PC, it's just a linux distribution


You can run Steam Big Picture Mode on Linux, which gives you the UI of SteamOS. You can also run Bazzite, which does this by default and is close enough for many people.

The actual image that gets shipped on the Steam Deck is available in bits and pieces as git tags in Valve's clandestine repos, but isn't yet being distributed for other devices. That is changing this spring, when they start supporting other vendors.


Styling is broken on mobile (chrome android). Content overflows and the text is shifted off-screen to the left


Unfortunately seconded. Interesting read though :)


I have been having a blast using quadlets on my tiny home server. Feels like I'm learning how to use systemd which is a nice bonus. My workflow consists of just connecting vscode over ssh and editing files as needed, which works well since everything is owned by my user.


Might be an interesting article but it's hard to get past the large amount of distracting AI art...


"Please don't pick the most provocative thing in an article or post to complain about in the thread. Find something interesting to respond to instead."

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html


I also found it tough to read. The image descriptions are great for people who need them, but on mobile they take up a lot of space, and present to the scanning eye as part of the post body proper.


The image descriptions did appear generated toward the beginning, but towards the middle it seems they are the prompt that was used to generate them (a bit quine-esqe) and towards the end, clearly part of the article.


Author of the article and the images here. The actual prompts were stacking about 10 networks in ways that make things look "better", and are more of the form "ligne claire, flat colors, 1girl, green hair, green eyes, long hair, <setting>, <major parts of image>" and then using a photo I took either with my iPhone or my DSLR as a img2img/ControlNet reference for things like pose and composition. The descriptions were all written by me in a very descriptive voice like what you'd find from AI generated descriptions (and in most cases, it's actually from the stage directions in script in the first place). My writing style looks like ChatGPT because they scraped my website to make up the training set for the AI.


I keep seeing people praising the HN UI but just can't see it. The lack of padding makes it hard to differentiate between articles. The many low contrast links below look cluttered. Not to mention how horrible the site is to use on mobile.


Installing Nvidia linux drivers directly from their website is a very bad idea im almost all cases


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