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JaymesRS , to books in What other fantasy should I read if I’m obsessed with Lord of the Rings?
@JaymesRS@midwest.social avatar

The Shannara series by Terry Brooks has a reputation as being an homage to LotR, and they are quite enjoyable.

If you want to try and branch out and give Urban Fantasy (magic, but more modern society) a try there’s a reason that the Dresden Files by Jim Butcher are super popular. The book Dead Beat was written as a mid-series introduction for new readers to the series because Sci-Fi had just come out with a TV series and the 1st few books are weaker because the author was super new to published writing.

Magician: Apprentice & Magician: Master by Feist are great

Long before there was Harry Potter, Ged from A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K Le Guinn was discovering he had magical talents and going to wizard school. It’s a beloved classic for a reason.

GreyShuck ,

The Shannara series by Terry Brooks has a reputation as being an homage to LotR, and they are quite enjoyable.

Waaay back, this was what I turned to after reading LotR. He had only published the first then and it was what made me understand the difference between good writing and bad. It gave me nothing else other than that lesson and certainly didn’t scratch the itch that I had for something like LotR. In fact nothing did and I found it best to look for something completely different that was good in it’s own right rather than poor imitations.

YoMismo , to piracy in Is Soulseek safe?

While you avoid risky files, like .exe/.cmd/.bat/.vbs etc, you should be safe, in the past Soulseek was known as music source, now it’s used also for some other stuff like softwares, books, movies & tv shows.

corsicanguppy , to linux in I don't find any value in Red-Hat but I see their corporate thinking. Who really need them and why?

CentOS being years behind was awful

You’re not doing it right. There’s absolutely a reason why enterprise linux works with a version that’s more-or-less locked in place (but for security updates, like a maintenance fork). You need to understand the value you’ve been overlooking.

  • ten years of a stable platform. Because, yeah, it’s not this week’s release with the glitter, but it’s also not a moving target of broken suck you have to constantly chase, and you can actually do dev.
  • dependencies are figured out
  • updates are trivial when security stuff comes out. Honestly – yum+cron is so stable and reliable, and the compatibility is part of the guarantee; so you - and your customers - don’t have to worry or - please god no - delay updates to gauge risk. Since updates are 99% of the work to avoid exploits, this goes from ‘huge risk’ to ‘no-brainer’. And you don’t have to worry that your dev environment is non-trivial to replicate on the daily.
  • your requirements for your software becomes ‘EL7’; maybe ‘EL7+EPEL7’ or so. Your installation process becomes ‘add repo RPM which pulls in other repo RPMs. yum install’ , and you’re already onto mere config work.
  • validating the install isn’t ‘did you install this ream of apps from this particular week in time, then run some wget|sh bullshit? Now run this other set of commands to confirm your installation’ – but in our case is just ‘rpm -qa|egrep’ or even an snmpwalk.
  • not working? Give me your one config file and your rpm-qa and we’ll replicate here trivially and find out why. (I didn’t work in support, but I liaised with them a bunch in the security work, and that was common practice) Tossing 4 lines and a <<EOF construct into a vagrant config is just so easy, now, and gives the entire machine to play with.

As someone who used to dev a notable app in the past, cross-distro problems alone made so many of the fringe OSes impossible to support, and so we didn’t. EL was the backbone because we respected what we had.

I just can’t figure out why this-week’s-glitter is more important than losing the install/support/update/validate burden by choosing a stable platform to work within. Life’s too short to support dependency hell or struggle just to replicate a failing setup in your lab for testing. Do you just not support customers?

Homeschooled316 , to gaming in Is it me or are games really not fun anymore

People are going to be pedantic about this one, because it’s not ALL games, but what you’re seeing is real. Game design, especially corporate design, has changed to accomplish two things:

  1. Engagement
  2. Accessibility

Games are designed to be playable by as many people as possible for as long as possible. Some would say this is just Western AAA games, but lots of anime games have been doing this nonsense for decades - games with 10 hours of baby’s first JRPG tutorial and 80 hours of grinding and filler. Many of them critically acclaimed games that fans would flog me for if I actually named one of them.

There are indie games that help you escape this, but many take that accessibility-first approach that requires everything to be very structured and corral you toward the right direction.

Again, I think people are going to be dismissive, but you’re right. It’s a tough world out there for someone who just wants to play a game and not be suckered into a live service engagement trap, or ladder system that hides your real MMR to keep you grinding up an imaginary points system. It’s not like the old days when you can just pick something popular, you have to discriminate and carefully judge what you buy now.

Antiscamer7 ,
@Antiscamer7@kbin.social avatar

Define "accessibility", because it sounds like you're describing a game trying to give a certain experience on a budget

Homeschooled316 ,

I should put “accessibility” in sarcastic quotation marks. Here, it doesn’t mean adding options or features to assist someone with different handicaps or needs. It means making the game so easy that anyone, even a toddler or game journalist, can finish it without having to learn from mistakes or think about what they’re doing.

Particularly with regard to excessive guidance. Varying degrees of “mobile game that makes you click exactly what it says for 30 minutes to prove you played the tutorial.” Those games may be the worst offenders, but less-dramatic hand holding happens in console and PC games too.

Antiscamer7 ,
@Antiscamer7@kbin.social avatar

That's a sweeping generalization, there are many indie games that are hard, obtuse, hostile or all of the above. Even a walking sim's difficulty is higher than just "beating" it, just like the point of a museum is higher than going through all the rooms and saying you "went"

corsicanguppy , to linux in Now that Red Hat is being IBM-fied, should I leave Fedora Kinoite?

You don’t need to leave Fedora.

RH will just cut them out soon enough, if you believe the trends.

Best have a plan to move on FROM them, though. Look into parallel porting to PCLinuxOS for now, as it’s a VERY similar maintenance routine, and it has a very wide app support window. Their unattended install (ie packer for vagrant or ovirt) is absolute ass, but that’s their achilles heel. Ultimately, that may not be a problem for you.

I’d direct you to the PCL/OS lemmy sub, but I think there is none yet.

user8e8f87c ,
@user8e8f87c@berlin.social avatar

@corsicanguppy @Raphael Fedora is the beta testing platform for RHEL. Redhat will not cut them out.

corsicanguppy ,

They just announced CentOS is the beta platform.

MrModule , to showerthoughts in Lemmy is so good right now for no particular reason

Le kiddos are still over at Reddit

ConTheLibrarian ,

I suspect (/hope lol) a lot of them will just use the reddit official app.

miraclerandy ,

Is that how we're gonna do this? Roll back all our jokes to 2015 reddit memes? Are we gonna start posting rage comics and complain about 9gag again? I'm not complaining, just trying to understand what's coming up.

PenguinJuice ,

Gotta roll it with it ma dude. The internet is constantly changing

Mannimarco ,

I am so ready for the return of rage comics, it was a glorious era

sculd , to gaming in Is it me or are games really not fun anymore

Play indie games. There are still a lot of fun games out there. AAA games are all "live services" nowadays and designed to maximize your play time, not fun.

liminis ,

Yeah, it's a golden age for indie development. I struggle to find AAA games I want to play, but when it comes to games as a whole I have far too many I want to check out thanks to the current vibrancy of the indie scene.

HowlsSophie ,

Absolutely. This is how I discovered games like Hollow Knight and Spiritfarer, two of my absolute favorites. Can't bring myself to play very many AAA games outside of some multiplayer ones like Mario Party and Mario Kart.

Puzzle_Sluts_4Ever , to nostupidquestions in How to create a decentralized kind of wiki?

As others have said: Federation doesn't matter. You don't need your star wars wiki to be compared to your battletech wiki and your pro wrestling wiki

As for avoiding "centralized" hosting companies: It runs the risk of "ruining a good thing", but Github pages are pretty much perfect for this. Public repository where the "mods" are the people who review pull requests. Make a pull request to the page of your choice and the markdown goes up. And because it is just a git repository, migration becomes trivial.

crashex OP ,

All you guys think fandom type wikis. I am thinking about practical knowledge. A wiki about donkey care can very well need a quick link to a wiki about medicinal plants, and wikis about adjacent practical topics, or think for example car tuners and motorbike tuners - they might like to have different wikis but will have lots of similar or equal topics. Wouldn't a federated wiki mean it can be better protected from attempts of centralized censorship?

Puzzle_Sluts_4Ever ,

Hyperlinks exist?

The benefit of federation would be shared accounts. Which aren't at all needed.

Like, you mention fandom. They have more or less killed wikis. They were not the norm a decade ago. And it was pretty common to see the trivia section for an actor or actress say "And they were in star wars!! WOOKIEPEDIA BITCH!" as a link

And that is how the internet worked. That site about engine repair? If they felt there was a good site on how to do timings for a transmission or whatever, they would link to that. And they might even contribute on multiple message boards with multiple accounts.

Zagaroth , to gaming in Is it me or are games really not fun anymore
@Zagaroth@beehaw.org avatar

shrug I play mostly single-player RPGs and similarly story-heavy games, so while the mechanics are different and the graphics much prettier, the structure is the same as it's been for the past 30+ years: Follow the story to get anywhere, or just wander around in your current area if you want to grind.

bonzo22 , to books in What other fantasy should I read if I’m obsessed with Lord of the Rings?

Already been mentioned but the The Wizard of Earthsea (Earthsea Cycle) by Ursula K. Le Guin is the only other fantasy that feels “similar” to the Lord of the Rings to me (admittedly I haven’t read a ton of fantasy, but I’ve read a decent amount). I’m reading through the series for the first time, on book three right now, and it’s just great. Feel like it does a nice job of defying my expectations of a “fantasy story” and Le Guin’s writing is beautiful.

Also these books straddle the line between fantasy and sci-fi, but the Broken Earth Series by N. K. Jemisin are amazing and among my favorite books. Actually gave the series a reread after my most recent reread of LotR earlier this year, so I can vouch they are an excellent follow up! These ones have less of an obvious fantasy parallel to LotR but they’re too good for me to not mention!

DuskLoaf ,
@DuskLoaf@lemmy.world avatar

Ditto,

Absolutely flew through that book, very enjoyable.

corsicanguppy , to linux in Is Systemd that bad afterall?
  1. systemd hasn’t become a better project built by better, smarter people to deliver a better set of features. It’s still hot garbage.
  2. it’s okay to continue pointing out it’s hot garbage, in the hopes we can go forward or back or just get on something better/else (same thing).
glarf , to android in What's your lemmy app of choice?

Connect for lemmy works great for me so far. Though it doesn't support wide screens very well.

ampersandrew , to gaming in Is it me or are games really not fun anymore
@ampersandrew@kbin.social avatar

I understand where you're coming from when you look at the games with the most marketing, but we also live in the age of Minecraft, not to mention the countless games and genres it inspired. The stuff you're looking for is out there.

Glide , to asklemmy in what do you do when you're alone in an elevator

…wait?

Guys, it’s like, 30 seconds. Stop, breath.

the16bitgamer , to books in eReader recommendations?

An eReader that doesn’t lock you into a format doesn’t mean much when ebooks from Google, Kobo and Amazon locks you into their DRM.

But let’s say you happen to strip the drm find a DRM free source of ebooks like on Humble Bundle and want an eReader and are looking for options.

From looking into myself you have a few options depending on the screen.

eInk:

  • Kobo (Clara 2e/HD)
  • Android eInk tablet (Onyx Boox/Boyue)

LCD:

  • Android Tablet (with KO Reader)
  • iPad (mini)
  • spyware fire tablet

For ease of use the Kobo is probably the best if you are just looking for something the integrates well with everything. But you will need Calibre on a host PC to store and manage your library since Kobo doesn’t do that for you.

iPad would be my second choice mainly because of the native apps for each drm. If you dont want to use the native apps, tutorials are limited but the Book app can read any ePub well, and you can sync books with iCloud. That said if you don’t want iCloud its a pain in the but todisabled, but iTunes can be used to manually add books to the Book app (or adobe digital editions)

Android is the most flexible but takes more work. A Samsung tablet will be the easiest to buy and run. And each eBook store does have a native app. That said DRM free is where Android shines, KOReader is a fabulous eReader app that supports so much that even the eInk android devices use it. The GUI isn’t the best but its functionality is the best.

This also applies to android eink as well. However do not expect software support more than what’s already installed. For a phone/tablet this would be a killer (have a likebook stuck on Android 4 with a dead play store) however since ebooks are offline the devices are still usable. If you want anything official… Good luck.


Amazon

While you will see a general consensus that Fire Tablets and Kindles should be avoided I have looked into them and this is my two cents on them.

Kindle - are surprising more usable then a Kobo without an account, but the majority of its features are locked out if you don’t have an account. With Calibre you can convert ePubs to Amazon’s format since they are rebadged ePubs and the Kindle will read it even if you are not signed in. However I personally don’t like the amount of work is needed to use it beyond what Amazon wants you to use it for. And especially out side of the USA the lack of Audio book functionality is irritating.

Fire Tablet - is the most useful of the Amazon devices. It can be used without an account with a lot of work and diligence during the checkout. Since its an Android Tablet you can install all but Googles DRM and even then Adobe Digital editions works on it. SD card storage upgrades are a nice bonus too for comics lovers or audiobooks fans. But you will be missing features until you sign in.

And here’s the thing, you may want an Amazon device, logged in since you will have a Serial Number which maybe used to “improve” the usability of your Amazon ebooks on non Amazon devices. Especially when the old gen of tablets go on sale. 😉

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