

Console video game players, I guess.
Off-and-on trying out an account over at @tal@oleo.cafe due to scraping bots bogging down lemmy.today to the point of near-unusability.


Console video game players, I guess.


Well, now we’ve got Trump on the right imposing new regressive taxes:
https://www.hbs.edu/bigs/robert-lawrence-qa-trade-tariffs
And since tariffs are only levied on goods, and since it’s poorer Americans who spend a greater share of their consumption on goods than rich Americans, this is a highly regressive tax.
And Newsom on the left:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sales_tax
Because the rate of a sales tax does not change based on a person’s income or wealth, sales taxes are generally considered regressive…Investopedia defines a regressive tax as “[a] tax that takes a larger percentage from low-income people than from high-income people. A regressive tax is generally a tax that is applied uniformly. This means that it hits lower-income individuals harder”.
EDIT: As of 2025, California has the eighth-highest average combined state-local sales tax rate in the US, at 8.802%:
https://taxfoundation.org/data/all/state/sales-tax-rates-2025/


He’s getting older. Maybe they just want a younger shot.
Middle of last year:



I mean, you can install each in a VM if you want to play with them.


Mistral AI’s CEO says Europe has 2 years to stop becoming America’s AI ‘vassal state’
Also on this page:
https://www.businessinsider.com/elon-musk-xai-explored-collaborating-with-mistral-cursor-2026-4
- Elon Musk’s xAI recently announced a partnership with AI coding startup Cursor.
- The two companies have also explored a three-way partnership with French AI startup Mistral.
- Musk is looking to catch up to Anthropic and OpenAI.
I mean, I suppose “know your audience”. If you’re going to the French legislature for money, you pitch accordingly.
“It will be decided in the next two years,” Mensch said during a Tuesday hearing on digital sovereignty and AI at France’s National Assembly, translated by Business Insider.
$ sudo apt install cool-retro-term hollywood
$ TMUX='' cool-retro-term --fullscreen -e hollywood
You don’t need to unset TMUX if you aren’t already using and inside tmux, but including in case someone is.
history | grep 'keyword'
If it’s bash, it’s using readline, which is in emacs-like mode by default, and so you can probably use Control-R to do a reverse i-search (incremental search). Enter to invoke the command. Control-C to abort i-search.
If a search matches multiple candidates, tap Control-R multiple times to cycle back through results.
EDIT: Also, ! has a built-in search, so if you are sure of the starting string, you can just do that. I generally prefer to use the interactive search to confirm that I’m not invoking something wonky.
$ touch a
$ rm a
$ touch a
$ !rm
rm a
$
You copy paste the command.
$ sudo apt update
-bash: sudo: command not found
$
Your distro doesn’t set up/install sudo by default, so your first task is installing sudo, then understanding /etc/sudoers syntax and understanding why the command to atomically replace /etc/sudoers is visudo and why on a multiuser system there’s value to atomic replacement. In the meantime, you probably learn about su and maybe, if your distro has disabled them, how to enable switching to the kernel virtual consoles on tty1 through tty7 so that in the meantime, you can do things as root while staying logged in. Also, you’re going to learn about environment variables, so as to set EDITOR, and where your shell config files live, what a login shell is, and in what shells ~/.bash_profile, ~/.profile, and ~/.bashrc run. Also, you first try running visudo as a regular user, but your distro places visudo in /usr/sbin instead of /usr/bin, so you can’t figure out why it’s not installed and are going to learn about the FHS and mlocate and updatedb so that you can find /usr/sbin/visudo and dpkg -S so that you can figure out which package it’s in and confirm that it’s actually installed and learn about PATH.
$ !!
It keeps its handses on the home row.
We were all at some point at the stage where doing anything at all in the terminal made us feel like a god.
Some of us were at the point where GUIs weren’t a thing and the terminal was the only option.


I suppose that if you’re another development studio working with Krafton, like InZOI, you’re probably looking with a lot of suspicion at every move from your publisher now.


I know they had QC issues with their dpads on their earlier controllers
Anecdotal: I just had a trigger on an 8BitDo Ultimate Bluetooth fail. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a button or trigger fail on any other gamepad I’ve ever owned, so that was a bit disappointing.
I am not familiar, but, cutting the “changes” section out of a review:
https://www.rpgland.com/games/hoshigamiremix/review.html
Remix adds various, easier difficulty levels, new character art, redone music, a new character, and an overhauled localization.
Another problem with the game is the extreme lack of portability. It is a DS title, and as such should be capable of being played for small amounts of time at once. Unfortunately, there is no suspend feature to allow for saving while in battle. Factor in that the average battle can take 20-40 minutes and that sometimes one battle immediately follows another with no break for saving, and here’s a game that is not at all good for playing on the move.
So going entirely off that, it sounds like the remake is probably preferable, but it might not be a good idea if you plan to play the DS game as a “mobile” game — dropping into the thing for a few minutes while waiting in a line or something.


rsync is a fine tool, but it’s not really for backups. It’s for unidirectionally syncing data, which is part of a backup.
There are tools that use librsync to do a backup system, like rdiff-backup or duplicity.
I have used rdiff-backup in the past, but restic supports deduping data keyed off content rather than filename, which is functionality that I rather like having. I drive a restic job from backupninja, which handles doing things like notifying you if a backup has failed.
Instead of using fbcon (the default, in-kernel framebuffer-based terminal emulator), use fbterm (a userspace framebuffer terminal emulator, which supports backgrounds) with fbv as specified in the fbterm man page.
It looks like there’s also a patch, fbcondecor, to add background support to fbcon, but it’s not in vanilla kernel.
goes to lemmy.sdf.org, which until something like yesterday had been saying that it was down until they could get more storage
top post is from pmjv
NOW I AM BECOME THE MODERATOR OF FUNHOLE, THE ALABASTER HAND OF CONTENT ON YOUR COCK
Might be Liberian dollars.
FWIW, Windows — assuming that that’s where you’re coming from — has a PATH environment variable too. It’s just less common to invoke things directly by executable name on Windows in 2026, or to modify it, so it doesn’t come up much. If you type echo %PATH% in cmd.com on Windows, you’ll see something similar.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PATH_(variable)#DOS,_OS/2,_and_Windows
I have GNU nano 8.4 on my system. Upon investigation, in default configuration:
Control-Backspace deletes the last character, same as Backspace.
Control-Delete reverse-deletes a word.
Alt-Backspace deletes the last word. This might be what you want.
Alt-Delete deletes the entire line.
I think that it’s probably because absent some kind of unusual extension, terminals normally send 0x08, the Backspace character, same as Control-H, for Control-Backspace.
On my system, in bash, using foot, Control-V Control-H shows
^H. So it’s sending ASCII 0x8, the Backspace character.Control-V Control-Backspace shows
^H. Ditto.Control-V Backspace shows
^?. It’s sending the Delete character, ASCII 0x7f.Control-V Del shows
^[[3~. It’s sending an escape sequence.Back in the day, some people had their terminals set to, when you hit Backspace, send either the Backspace character or the Delete character. Not a problem I’ve run into for some years, but I’d guess that nano probably has that behavior by default, treating both 0x7f and 0x8 as hitting the Backspace key, so as not to break on systems like that.
EDIT: I’d also add that Alt-Backspace (well, M-DEL in emacs parlance) is also what emacs uses for “delete word”, so a lot of software that uses readline, like bash, will also normally work that way out of box.
EDIT2: If you want to investigate ways to have terminals recognize more key combinations (so that you aren’t sending the same sequence for both Control-H and Control-Backspace and want to get down and dirty aiming to configure software to use different bindings for those different keystrokes), IIRC the
kittyvirtual terminal emulator has been exploring extensions, and some terminal emulators have implemented some of those extensions.searches
Yeah.
https://terminfo.dev/extensions/kitty-keyboard-protocol
That being said, I would guess that a lot of programs that run in the terminal won’t be set up out of box to rely on Kitty protocol extensions.
EDIT3: Also, I don’t think that fbcon (the default Linux kernel framebuffer console) or fbterm (the userspace virtual terminal), one of which you’d probably use if you switched out of Wayland/X11, presently support Kitty input extensions, so if you rig up programs to rely on said extensions, you won’t have those keys available in the plain ol’ Linux console.