No no, again it’s not so much about the social media itself it’s being seen by recruiters. They don’t have to give a shit about what or how often you’re posting. It’s about having your name pop up to a recruiter that could land you a job.
Administrator of thelemmy.club
Nerd, truck driver, and kinda creeped that you’re reading this.
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I’m not into all that but I’d imagine it’s less about the posts and more about being visible, seen more often.
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Privacy@lemmy.ml•A compulsory mandated app installed on every Indian citizen's new phone
22·5 days agoReuters cited sources to report that US tech giant Apple plans not to comply with the mandate and will convey the same to New Delhi.
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TenForward: Where Every Vulcan Knows Your Name@lemmy.world•Black Friday on Ferenginar: Save your gold-pressed latinum
1·8 days agoEh. I’ve found it’s pretty good for video games
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TenForward: Where Every Vulcan Knows Your Name@lemmy.world•Black Friday on Ferenginar: Save your gold-pressed latinum
3·9 days agoJust know what it is you want and the normal price, then check it out. It’s that easy.
Usually because they include by default some proprietary software. Usually that is firmware for processors or graphics. Or they by default include repositories with non-free software. Also media codecs are a common one too.
The FSF takes a pretty extremist approach to FOSS. Which isn’t necessarily bad.
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Open Source@lemmy.ml•Thunderbird Adds Native Microsoft Exchange Email Support - The Thunderbird Blog
5·17 days agoLmao a huge number of people use it for work still
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Games@sh.itjust.works•Gabe Newell caps off Steam Machine week by taking delivery of a new $500 million superyacht with a submarine garage, on-board hospital and 15 gaming PCsEnglish
4·20 days agoYes, but I think inflation quickly makes that a pretty low number.
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Games@sh.itjust.works•Gabe Newell caps off Steam Machine week by taking delivery of a new $500 million superyacht with a submarine garage, on-board hospital and 15 gaming PCsEnglish
141·20 days agoI think the line to never have to work again is pretty far under $100mil
I just can’t get with bread machines. The loaves are shaped weird and too wide. And honestly just using a pan hasn’t been bad for me. Though I do have a beefy stand mixer that does the kneading for me.
My favorite in terms of just being neat and cheap is my “safety” can opener. https://www.amazon.com/Safe-Cut-Can-Opener-Restaurant/dp/B0761PZC5F
It’s not about it being “safer” to me. It’s just plain better. It completely unseals the tops of cans without puncturing them, meaning the lid comes completely off at the rim. Never failed me. Opening something like some cat foods or refried beans is much better because it leaves no lip for the contents to catch on. I use it for pull tab cans too!
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Android@lemdro.id•Moto G57 and G57 Power are now official and already on sale - they have a headphone jackEnglish
11·21 days agoShould be able to unlock it if you get it retail. Mainline Linux I very much doubt it.
Uhhh no that’s not true. Unless you’re one to say everything a computer does is AI, like the NPCs in video games are “AI”
I refer specifically to generative AI that’s taken prominence this decade.
But also because (at least as far as I can tell), he doesn’t use AI.
Does he though??
I looked into it and found this from not even all that long ago.



I’m all for calling slop out, but we gotta be sure. It does kinda have that style but I don’t see other signs.
Edit: He’s posted his art on Instagram since at least 2020, well before AI image models could put out anything nearly passable.

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Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•Valve reportedly cooking native Linux version of Half-Life: Alyx, optimized for Steam Frame VREnglish
2·23 days agoNo, but it seems like a logical step is all. Allow devs to distribute ARM binaries of their game. Release Steam for ARM.
If they do the work anyhow no sense in wasting it.
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Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•Valve reportedly cooking native Linux version of Half-Life: Alyx, optimized for Steam Frame VREnglish
4·23 days agoYes, but they’re making a build specifically for this set. They own all the source code. Presumably that means they made this version native for ARM.
Considering the big rise in ARM PCs it’s completely logical that they start supporting it more too, allowing devs to make and distribute ARM builds.
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Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Microsoft has blocked Massgrave's KMS38 activation method for WindowsEnglish
8·23 days agoFor Linux, you find out if there is a package. If not you go to a website and see if there is an app image or zip file. You then need to know where to place the downloaded file, how to get it running (making it executable), knowing how to chmod and chown (it is better to have to do it like in Linux, but it is an extra step), and how to add it to your desktop (there is no right+click and add to desktop/create shortcut option in Arch based distros like there is on Windows). If there is a service component you may need to go into command line and systemctl to enable it.
I don’t think I’ve ever followed that workflow to be honest. Except for when doing something niche and way above and beyond something a casual user would do.
Open the software center, search what you want. Click install. Done. I use the terminal to the same effect but that’s by preference. Installing packages as you described is not at all recommended… They won’t update with the system.
The “add to desktop” thing really depends on your Desktop Environment too. GNOME not really, KDE and most others yeah.








Salad-broth supercritical phase