justtocomment | 6 months ago | on: Ask HN: What's a good 3D Printer for sub $1000?
justtocomment's comments
justtocomment | 1 year ago | on: Open Technology Fund Files Lawsuit to Contest Grant Termination
> OTF provides direct funding and expert support services to individuals and organizations around the world [...].
Some of these projects:
- Let's Encrypt
- Tor
- OpenVPN
- Tails
- Quad9
as well as several journalism and human rights related projects.justtocomment | 1 year ago | on: Cold Email Handbook
justtocomment | 1 year ago | on: Cold Email Handbook
I wonder if I'm oblivious to some kind of sarcasm in your comment, because if I take what's written at face value, it sounds like you advocate for not getting caught in favour of not actually doing the criminal thing.
justtocomment | 2 years ago | on: XCurl
justtocomment | 2 years ago | on: Danish artist who submitted empty frames as artwork told to repay funding
justtocomment | 2 years ago | on: Fairphone 4 is coming to the US
This citicism is valid. But I think it leaves out a lot of the overall picture.
I have a Fairphone 3, and so far it survived being dropped into the bathtub (being submerged for a sec), being dropped on hard floors several times and being stepped on (screen got cracked, but it still works).
Like with the Fairphone 2 I had before that, I'm able to do repairs (part replacements) on my own with minimal effort. It gets support for years.
I have it running /e/ OS (terrible name) without Google Services and while that's not Graphene OS, I vastly prefer it to Google Android.
For me having minor frustrations with Wi-Fi is well worth having a less-unfree and more-ethical phone.
justtocomment | 2 years ago | on: Deluge – sequencer, synthesizer and sampler – goes open source
Things may improve if MIDI 2 ever becomes widespread. But I wouldn't hold my breath.
When sequencing monophonic sequences, one might be able to work around this by adding a MIDI processor into the signal path that prepends certain pitch bend messages to certain note values - but I can't say for certain how well this work, I never tried it.
Here's a link with some ideas (and scripts) to implement microtonal synth voices with today's firmware version of the deluge:
https://forums.synthstrom.com/discussion/comment/16257/#Comm...
Hope that helps!
justtocomment | 2 years ago | on: Deluge – sequencer, synthesizer and sampler – goes open source
I use the Deluge to learn music theory, synthesis and a bit of composition and it's so much more fun making music in the garden than to spend another hour sitting in front of the computer.
Synthstrom Audio seems committed to support this device for years to come: they sell spare parts, organize upgrades to newer hardware versions (some more cosmetic, recently though a screen replacement from 7 segment LED to OLED display), offer "refreshment" (new silicon pads, potentiometer and encoders).
Things I hope can be implemented:
* Smooth scrolling: currently Deluge only scrolls in increments of a whole "screen", e.g. 16 steps with a step being anything from a few bars down to something like 256ths of a whole note. This makes it hard to follow and awkward to edit pieces that are not in 4/4 time signature.
* "Accidentals" in scale mode: currently every row displays notes of the same pitch. Deluge allows arbitrary subsets of the chromatic scale (as long as it's at least 7 notes) to form a scale, and in "scale mode" rows for notes not in that set remain hidden. To "escape" the scale one has to switch to "chromatic mode" (a row for every note on the chromatic scale) or to create a new scale by adding notes to rows not in the current scale in chromatic mode. With only 8 rows that means that not even a single octave fits on the screen any more. I hope that something like accidentals can be implemented where the sharpened/flattened notes would simply show up in a different color on the row of the scale note, akin to the use of accidentals on staff notation.
* Support for microtonal scales
* A master compressor
All in all the Deluge is a wonderful piece of gear and I wish Synthstrom Audio well. I really hope going Open Source will benefit their business as much as customers are going to benefit from this.
justtocomment | 3 years ago | on: Rats can bop their heads to the beat
Colleagues working with animals tell me there's strict restrictions on conducting these tests, everything has to conform to animal protection laws and ethics requirements. If tests aren't deemed necessary, they won't be conducted.
This makes me wonder about the necessity and suffering/benefit ratio of "surgically plac[ing wireless accelerometers] on the rats", especially since the image processing already seems to provide insight.
justtocomment | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: Firing an employee under a month before vest?
Ever had a bad boss?
justtocomment | 4 years ago | on: German state planning to switch 25,000 PCs to LibreOffice
justtocomment | 4 years ago | on: Film simulations from scratch using Python
Since the camera can store the same photo in 2 different formats (RAW+JPEG), I'm wondering if it would be worthwhile to use a lot of these file pairs to try to get a LUT allowing to map Fuji RAW files to Fuji-Like JPEG results.
Is there anybody knowledgeable here to tell me whether this approach is doomed from the start or if it could be promising?
justtocomment | 5 years ago | on: Has Amazon Ruined the Name Alexa?
What worked great for us was not buying the thing in the first place.
justtocomment | 5 years ago | on: Split keyboards and how to build them
most (all?) of these keyboards give the thumbs more to do than merely pressing the "space" key. This is awesome, because thumbs are strong and relatively quick.
However: with the exception of those sculpted keyboards (Dactyl-ManuForm et.al.), the thumb keys are triggered by lateral thumb movement, which can be troublesome.
I had absolutely no problems using traditional keyboards for ~30 years, but decided to proactively switch to a split keyboard (ReDox) nonetheless.
Mostly it's great, but I developed pain in my thumbs from the constant uncommon (to me) lateral thumb movement.
I replaced the thumb switches with lighter ones and remapped my keyboard layout to use only 4 of the available 12 thumb keys, but it's still not ideal.
I'm thinking about building one of those sculpted keyboards now.
justtocomment | 5 years ago | on: “I took FSFE to court. This is my story”
* I know Matthias Kirschner personally (though not very good). This story does not fit the character I met.
* There is a campaign of disinformation, character assassination and harrassment going on against the Debian project, the FSFE, and their members (maybe other projects as well). This has been going on for multiple years now, presumably all orchestrated by the same individual, impersonating a multitude of different persons.
Edit:
I also met Malina Galina in person, she made a positive impression on me. I just found out the linked text also shows up on her twitter account.
justtocomment | 5 years ago | on: Show HN: Obsidian – A knowledge base that works on local Markdown files
Best of luck with the product, also +1 to the suggestion of an open source client from a sibling thread!
justtocomment | 5 years ago | on: Show HN: Obsidian – A knowledge base that works on local Markdown files
That in the first five minutes of this post being online, several users more or less claim that this has changed their lives in their first-ever comment on HN strikes me as a little odd however.
(Yes I'm aware that this is also my first-ever comment on HN.)