On the flipside, not all humans deserve kindness. The only things that every human deserves is life and dignity. The rest depends on how kind (or unkind) they are to others.
- 0 Posts
- 587 Comments
balsoft@lemmy.mlto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•I wish the Steam Controller used AA batteriesEnglish
4·15 hours agoLast time I ordered a phone battery from AliExpress I got it in two weeks flat. If you notice that your battery doesn’t hold as long, just order a new one, it will arrive long before the device dies. There are also local battery shops, but they will charge a premium for quicker delivery.
Doing this once every few years is nothing compared to the hassle of taking out the batteries every time you want to charge them.
balsoft@lemmy.mlto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•I wish the Steam Controller used AA batteriesEnglish
4·16 hours agoYou might be replying to a wrong comment? But I think the OC meant that a bigger lithium battery can provide more power for rumble and such, compared to AAs.
balsoft@lemmy.mlto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•I wish the Steam Controller used AA batteriesEnglish
7·16 hours agoI think that’s mostly because you can’t really keep them plugged in while playing, so if you forget to charge them before a play session it would get very annoying. I would still prefer if they used an explicitly rechargeable standard with a way to charge the batteries while in the controller.
balsoft@lemmy.mlto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•I wish the Steam Controller used AA batteriesEnglish
4·16 hours agoIf it’s a popular enough device, Chinese manufacturers will copy its batteries for more than the lifetime of the device itself. I’ve bought new replacement batteries for a smartphone over 10 years old off AliExpress.
If it’s not, chances are it’s using one of the standard pouch battery sizes (yes, that’s very much a thing, AA is not the only battery standard out there), which Chinese manufacturers will keep producing for longer than the lifetime of the universe.
The only tangible benefit is the hot-swap feature.
To me it doesn’t outweigh all the drawbacks of having to charge batteries separately. For a controller like this it literally doesn’t matter, you can just plug it in to charge while playing.
For VR controllers it does matter more, but I would still much prefer some explicitly rechargeable standard size, e.g. 14650, with a way for the controller to also be a charger still.
balsoft@lemmy.mlto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•I wish the Steam Controller used AA batteriesEnglish
2·16 hours agoYeah, if memory serves, the last ThinkPad to do it was the T480, which was in 2018. Maybe there’s some P-series that did it afterwards too. Hello from an X2100!
balsoft@lemmy.mlto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•I wish the Steam Controller used AA batteriesEnglish
7·16 hours agoAnd you have to (gasp) order a bat from AliExpress for $10, take out 9 screws, and plop it in there, just once every 5 years or so? Yeah, how inconvenient and expensive, compared to buying your own batteries before you can even use a thing, a separate charger, and taking the batteries out every time you want to charge them, which is like weekly.
balsoft@lemmy.mlto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•I wish the Steam Controller used AA batteriesEnglish
9·17 hours agoSome laptops used to have that. They would have two batteries, one internal one and one hot-swappable external one.
balsoft@lemmy.mlto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•I wish the Steam Controller used AA batteriesEnglish
6·17 hours agoBecause they are more expensive and much less convenient than an integrated pouch-style battery in the device.
balsoft@lemmy.mlto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•I wish the Steam Controller used AA batteriesEnglish
6·17 hours agoThere are like 3 or 4 different types. NiCd and NiMH have slightly different voltages and vastly different voltage curves, and it’s a gamble whether your device will work with either of them and how long they will last. Li-Ion (with a voltage regulator and charge controller) are quite expensive (compared to a pouch battery of the same capacity) and you won’t be able to buy them in the nearest grocery shop. Also, it’s not safe for the controller to even attempt to charge any of them, so you will need a separate charger, and you’ll have to take the batteries out of the controller, put them in a charger, and then put them back every time they go flat. At that point it’s just so much easier and more convenient to have a pouch-style battery that the controller charges by itself, and you can very easily replace every 5 years or so by just removing a couple screws and slapping a new AliExpress special in there. The key here is to make batteries easily replaceable, of course, ideally without any tool, but a standard philips screwdriver is acceptable too.
balsoft@lemmy.mlto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•I wish the Steam Controller used AA batteriesEnglish
8·18 hours agoAA batteries are horrible for the environment if something goes wrong during the disposal process (e.g. you accidentally throw them in the trash). Also it’s yet another thing you have to buy like weekly if you’re going to use the thing. A rechargeable cell that is easy to replace is the perfect sweetspot, and from the videos I’ve seen of the controller it will be very easy to replace the bat. Just unscrew some screws, unplug the battery, plug a new one back in, screw some screws back in (optional). You’ll only have to do this once every 5 years or so if the BMS is good. You’ll be able to get a new bat from AliExpress for very cheap, probably like $10-20 or something, way way cheaper than getting new AAs for those entire 5 years.
balsoft@lemmy.mlto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•I wish the Steam Controller used AA batteriesEnglish
10·18 hours agoAlso, AAs become literal toxic waste after like 20-40 hours of gameplay, and need to be properly disposed of (that is assuming that you live in a developed country and there are recycling options available at all). Single-use battery suck and should fuck right off.
You want AI in your browser? Just add <your favourite spying ad machine> as a “search engine” option, with a URL like
https://chatgpt.com/?q=%25s, with a shortcut like
@ai. You can then ask it anything right there in your search bar.Maybe also add one with a URL with some query pre-written like
https://chatgpt.com/?q=summarize this page for me: %sas
@aisor something, modern chatbots have the ability to make HTTP requests for you. Then if you want to summarize the page you’re on, you do Ctrl+L Ctrl+C @ais Ctrl+V Enter. There, I solved all your AI needs with 4 shortcuts without literally any client-side code.
Yeah, true, but it certainly would add a lot of economic pressure on that industry.
Certain groups will lobby really hard to make it illegal and punishable.
At the point of first contact IRL, I avoid mentioning anything even vaguely inflammatory: that I’m an immigrant (that one is hard to hide because my pronunciation of the local language is still quite terrible), vegan, atheist, hold anarchist, marxist, and generally anti-capitalist views. If the relationship lasts longer than just a single contact, as I build up trust and goodwill I slowly start seeping out that info, usually in the order that I listed it in.
balsoft@lemmy.mlto
Linux@programming.dev•Valve hopes the Steam Machine will make devs pay more attention to Linux anti-cheat support
17·1 day agoHow about this:
- Add ability to make custom “servers” (which can be just rooms on your proprietary server) with no anti-cheat at all, just fool around with your friends and do whatever you want, mods/hacks/cheats/etc.
- At least for casual play modes, make protocols that are less reliant on clients to do the right thing and instead only tell the clients more or less what the player should know already. This might leave some room for sweaty tryhard cheaters to consistently beat other people, but in a casual game which is mostly just for fun this doesn’t really matter.
There may be some places where a protocol-level solution is not feasible. In that case yeah, require your anti-cheat, but only for competitive game modes. I wouldn’t even be pissed if they didn’t allow it to run on Linux, Linux makes it easy to do whatever the fuck you want with your computer and so a determined cheater will find a way to cheat. It sucks, but I feel like a lot of people don’t really care that much about sweaty competitive game modes anyway. Just give me a way to fool around with friends, it’s not that serious FFS.
Good luck getting a job with tattoos and dyed hair. All people are judgemental, but people with any power are judgemental as fuck.
Capitalism is making it not fun. It hadn’t been fun for an average person before capitalism. Feudalism was worse on many levels.
However, the next mode of production will inevitably be better than this. If human civilization survives, that is.




I’m sure you are already aware, but just in case, there’s a lot of prior work in getting a truly Linux mobile phone.
There are ready-made devices like PinePhone (the PinePhone Pro looks the most promising one of the bunch), Librem 5, and Liberux Nexx. I think at least some of those companies publish schematics for their boards, you should probably check those out if you want to design your own.
There is also another direction, taken by postmarketOS and the like, to install Linux on a phone that shipped with Android out of the box.
It should be easy enough to install postmarketOS on your device, since it seems to have support for raspberry pi. The benefit of postmarketOS here is that it makes it really easy to install mobile Linux UI shells, like phosh, gnome-mobile, plasma-mobile, or sxmo. This will let you try all of them out and maybe pick one as a starting point for your software stack.