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They've all passed through my town. They coordinated it all with our local sheriff's office and sent out notifications well in advance so people would know to take alternate routes.


Ghost? It's simple to set up, uses Stripe and Digital Ocean does a one-click install.


Subjoin has 5% fee, with no subscription cost (https://ghost.org/pricing/). And you have to upgrade with X amount of members.

It does look nice, though! It seems Ghost is an all-in-one paid community platform. Something that has all kinds of bells and whistles you pay for.

It's in a similar niche, but Subjoin has a slightly different direction.

I will be having my next set of updates in coming weeks :)


My trained LoRas seem to defeat it pretty easily, but that's introducing extremely specific facial data. It does well at generic AI faces however.


Hi Remmy, this is definitely something that must be addressed when this tool becomes popular and people try to bypass it when creating AI faces (like using trained lora). Thanks for pointing that out!


Yes.


Not sure why this is downvoted. This model is heavily censored by default.


Would love to read more about your time in NanoGPT. I've been getting familiar with it myself lately and it's still pretty much gibberish in the output with 16M, but the dataset is admittedly trash right now as well.


I recently moved to TubeSync and Jellyfin for YouTube videos. TubeSync will make a copy of the channel locally while applying Sponsorblock filters directly to the video file.

It checks nightly for any new videos on the channel and Jellyfin sends me a notification when a new video is ready to watch.


Threads isn't even a new app from them. It was discontinued just a few years ago. This is a relaunch with a more Twitter like experience.


It is a new app, it's just reusing a previous brand name, it has nothing to do with the previous app.


Come on, the previous Threads was also Instagram’s standalone messaging service.


This isn't a messaging service and there's no shared codebase


I just did a fresh Arch install last week. Running 6.4.1 kernel on a ThreadRipper CPU with an RTX 2070 Super and an RTX 3060. Driver version 535.54.03 and CUDA 12.2. Everything "just works". There was no manual configuration, tweaking or hacking around needed. No issues running Wayland, Proton is handling gaming beautifully and not a sign of screen tearing.

The experience is different for everyone it seems.


Same here with a much less beefy system; I did have screen tearing (on Xorg) which was fixed by following the instructions at https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/NVIDIA/Troubleshooting

I can play almost all single player games, whether they officially support proton or not; the only major game I have been unable to play (despite following all instructions online) is Gris.


Toss in RDClient for real-debrid support via the qbitorrent plugin in sonaar/radarr and it's fantastic.


I'm not sure why it feels so weird either, but it definitely does. I was never a big fan of him personally, but have to agree with a lot of what he says. I think, for me at least, watching him work on a board while saying these things made it more relatable where this feels more like, "Gather round the big comfy chair, children. I cle Louis is going to rant and profanely scream about X, then talk to his cat in a baby voice."

Just... Odd.


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