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First Open Source dating app


What do you think about it? I guess that woman to men ratio will be something like 1:20
in reply to mlody

I checked it out for fun some time ago.
I really appreciated how unmonetized and not emotionally manipulative it was.
There's like no people on there though.
in reply to Sivecano

Be the people on there that you want there to be

🙌🌈

in reply to mlody

more like 1000:1.

you know these cats? because the site is joke; like, check out the faq. and says "we" a lot, who's that? who's moderating spam and scams and abuse and such? how are they financing the infra? the name, dios mio...

This entry was edited (1 hour ago)


Orion Browser


Any mac users out there who tried this browser? Linux alpha is coming this month so will try it myself then.

It sounds like they are building a new browser from the ground up.



I'm so confused with this random audio issue


Speakers -> Worked via Line OUT for months

Take PC apart and change PSU, assemble PC back.

Speakers - Line OUT detected but can't test Left/Right audio channels, options missing. No AUDIO from speakers unless I select them as default in Pavucontrol or manually assign outputs via Helvum.

Fedora 43 GNOME

How do I get my GNOME audio settings to work again?

This is so random and funny at the same time... yet frustrating because it makes no god damn sense :D

in reply to WereCat

I have a stupid question: Are you sure you're not confusing "line out" and "headphone out"? They're different, and pretty much every desktop supports both these days. But standard PC speakers usually connect to the "headphone" socket.
in reply to Redkey




in reply to slothrop

They could save $12.4B and dust off Canada's anti-monopoly laws which haven't been in use in 30 years. Break up Roblaws.
in reply to SaveTheTuaHawk

We're waiting to see if a corporate lapdog wins NDP leadership in March before I say anything about who could be willing to try that lol.
in reply to slothrop

Any chance that > $12.4B is directly taxed or siphoned from the big grocery chains?


Help managing access to multiple VPN services (Tailscale, Wireguard, Twingate)


cross-posted from: discuss.online/post/34942012

I find everyone using different services, so unsure how to best manage (and balance) concurrent access in Ubuntu/Debian to:
- Local network services
- Tailscale services from userA
- Tailscale services from userB
- Wireguard (OpenVPN also option) from userC
- Twingate from userD

Each user is wanting to share different services via VPN, and pressuring any to change their production setups to a different style of VPN is not going to happen.
- Management via software
- Possibly up a routing device along the lines of OpenWrt or OpnSense.
- Could even distribute such devices between these friends.

Thanks for all thoughts!

This entry was edited (19 hours ago)
in reply to kiol

Are you sharing your Linux PC with a bunch of different users? Or are you sharing your Linux server with a bunch of different users?
in reply to stratself

If it's a bunch of users sharing a bunch of resources from behind a bunch of different VPNs, I guess the most simple way is to tell them to expose it to the internet
in reply to kiol

Personally, I would do this in docker. That way you can have clearer separation between services and networks. But it's not a hard requirement.

I would just do it, as you wrote. For example, on the account of jellyfin server, configure the tailscaleA client, then wireguard client, etc. Set those up as separate user services/processes/system services if root permissions needed and that's it. Then on other services set the needed connections separately.
It might be handy to set up traefik, so things served via vpns can go through the same routes as local traffic, so you use the same path as your users do

When you have a service that serves something on a port, you are not limited to only one connection. It can be accessed through different clients, the only needed part is that those clients connect to their respective vpn networks and pass the traffic correctly

I don't see a need for a separate device for that routing



AI controls is coming to Firefox


Starting with Firefox 148, which rolls out on Feb. 24, you’ll find a new AI controls section within the desktop browser settings. It provides a single place to block current and future generative AI features in Firefox.


They actually listened to the community, thats very nice.



Claude Code is suddenly everywhere inside Microsoft


Software engineers at Microsoft are now expected to use both Claude Code and GitHub Copilot and give feedback comparing the two, I’m told. Microsoft sells GitHub Copilot as its AI coding tool of choice to its customers, but if these broad internal pilot programs are successful, then it’s possible the company could even eventually sell Claude Code directly to its cloud customers.


Guys? Are we going to have to rename Microsoft products from Copilot to Claude soon?

Microsoft Claude 365?



'No conocemos la palabra rendición': los cubanos responden a las nuevas amenazas de Estados Unidos




'No conocemos la palabra rendición': los cubanos responden a las nuevas amenazas de Estados Unidos


#Cuba


'No conocemos la palabra rendición': los cubanos responden a las nuevas amenazas de Estados Unidos





Wiarton Willie predicts early spring, but Punxsutawney Phil disagrees


Wiarton Willie, along with most of his Canadian counterparts, has predicted an early spring after he did not see his shadow on Monday morning on Groundhog Day.

Groundhog Day is a long-held tradition of watching animals coming out of hibernation to predict whether there'll be an early spring or six more weeks of winter.

Every Feb. 2, groundhogs and even a crustacean emerge from their shelters to see if they see their shadows.

This entry was edited (20 hours ago)
in reply to breakfastmtn

predict whether there'll be an early spring or six more weeks of winter.


Where I live 6 more weeks of winter is an early spring.

in reply to breakfastmtn

Phil is warning of an ICE storm, and is hiding in its hole with a whistle ready.


Danish Students Face Legal Action and Fines Over Textbook Piracy


After "awareness" campaigns that failed to move the needle for years, Denmark’s leading anti-piracy group is shifting to a more aggressive litigation strategy. The Rights Alliance confirmed it will begin filing civil lawsuits against individual students who are caught sharing even a single digital textbook. The anti-piracy group prefers not to mention the targeted platforms but says it uses undercover monitoring of private groups to gather evidence.


in reply to slothrop

Is this the music industry asking for more than all the money in the world again?

Yes, I did say again.

in reply to Tiger666

LINE MUST GO UP. ANY LINE ACTUALLY. WE'RE FUCKIN DESPERATE.

  • Businesses everywhere
in reply to slothrop

we have stood with the artist community against piracy


Correct me if I'm wrong, but Anna's archive is not giving you song downloads, but rather metadata

over a massive music data scrape


So when are you going to sue AI companies?



Den främsta anledningen är att Wien i princip inte ökat sin befolkning på 100 år. 1910 hade Wien en befolkning på drygt 2 miljoner invånare och 2025 har Wien en befolkning på drygt 2 miljoner invånare. Wien har inte varit utsatta för nåt tryck när det gäller bostadsmarknaden utan där alltid funnits ett överskott på bostäder.
blog.zaramis.se/2026/02/02/att…

in reply to Goretantath

gup.exe making network requests for other than: notepad-plus-plus.org, github.com and release-assets.githubusercontent.com


doublepulsar.com/small-numbers…

The write up is from December when it was first disclosed afaik


in reply to Admiral Patrick

in reply to OpenStars

Are you allowed to talk about the Hannibal Directive on PieFed?
in reply to Admiral Patrick

Lemmy.ml isn’t the “flagship” or default instance when you go to join-Lemmy.org.