Not really (I wasnāt using Google directly anyway), I think it fills a slightly different niche than search engines.
Itās good as a fuzzy search for the sum of public knowledge, since it can understand quite complex queries and point you in the right direction, then you can go to regular search engines to find more specific stuff.
Bing was fun to exploit, but I donāt really see why itās useful, it tends to always look up information which means it provides less of its own knowledge, I can do the searches myself better than an LM. Maybe it can provide more concise answers than all the SEO crap everywhere, but that can be avoided by searching on specific websites like reddit.
Itās about methodology more than research questions, although they are of course linked. Incorporating digital methods in your humanities project, like GIS, 3D modeling or ABM, will quickly land you in digital humanities. Remember though, humanities have a lot of theory and methodology you might be unfamiliar with as a CS student, so teaming up with someone who has those skills but lack in programming etc. will synergize in this field.
No, but recently iāve stopped using Google as well. Currently I mostly use Ecosia, I think their company philosophy is pretty cool and I like the results so far. I donāt think that ChatGPT works as a substitute for a search engine for my uses at least, as many of my searches require me to check multiple links and I donāt always type in the full natural language sentences necessary for ChatGPT.
Ravenlok is dope. Itās easy, and button-mashy, but my god the visuals and music make up for all of it. It swept me away. I think it would be especially fantastic for kids, but definitely enjoyable for adults to.
Valheim is great in single-player, to my surprise.
I like Redfall. ducks But seriously, I do. I like the big open world, the over-the-top vampire thing, the feeling of finding the best way to sneak up on the enemy and take them down. The guns feel satisfying to me. I get excited every time I find a better one. Iām curious where the story is going. Some of the set pieces and environmental storytelling moments are really cool.
I havenāt encountered many bugs at all. One time some enemies appeared out of nowhere, but honestly that just fit in with the vibe of the game anyway.
The AI is dumb, butā¦ Iām finding I donāt care. Theyāre numerous and still manage to kill me sometimes. Iām ignoring it entirely the same way I ignore it in the original Deus Ex.
Itās not a Dishonored or a Prey, but itās not trying to be, either. Itās great if you just want to explore an interesting map and do some sneaking and shooting and looting.
Iām obviously the minority in this opinion, but also, itās on gamepass, so it doesnāt cost anything to try if you havenāt. I almost didnāt because of the reviews and Iām very glad I gave it a chance anyway.
Lotro - great community, great designs on raid encounters in endgame, where you will die if not everyone plays their role, starting from tier 2. Tier 1 is always designed as a learning experience before moving to tier 2, which makes it great for casuals like myself to get into. Only issue I have is the bloat of leveling, where you now have to go endless hours untill reaching endgame, almost mostly without seeing other players, as those areas are now empty. Feels more like a mediocre Singleplayer game during that time. Otherwise I have started recently on tWoW, lots of people to quest with, which is great š
I used to run OSMC and had Kodi and everything on there but honestly it was more trouble than it was worth. Kodi and itās piracy addons are pretty buggy in most cases and fail to work reliably for very long. Since then Iāve switched back to using Plex but soon I may have to switch again to Jellyfin.
I still use google. If I have a programming related query I use it normally. Otherwise I search for example ābest cheap iems redditā because Google has cannibalised itself by the means of SEO.
Kodi on my Android TV box, I couldnāt use extensions on stremio for some reason (or I didnāt try hard enough). Itās still there and when I try to find a stream for any movie, it just returns blank.
When you are creating something like Lemmy, where you want wide uptake, you need to pander to the masses.
The /r/selfhosted surveys show around half of self-hosters mostly or exclusively use docker. A significant portion of the rest can use docker if needed.
If youāre in the 20% that isnāt covered by the most common setup, then it can be frustrating. But supporting that 20% takes as much effort as supporting the other 80% (see 80/20 rule), and when things are new itās just not where the effort should be focused.
So you have all those servers, but why canāt you install debian or ubuntu server on one of them?
You could also get a $2/month VPS and run it on that. Beehaw is run on something similar (though apparently $12 a month, but a lot more users).
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