I hated Windows 8 enough to put up with it at the time. It’s nuts how much things have improved since then.
Alt-Account: lemmy.world/u/Hubi
Matrix: @hubinator:matrix.org
I hated Windows 8 enough to put up with it at the time. It’s nuts how much things have improved since then.
Same here, at least so I thought until I started distro-hopping out of curiosity. And I learned that there are a ton of Nvidia specific problems on a lot of different distributions. I guess I just got lucky with my main setup that I’ve been using since around the same time.
I’m on Neon User Edition and 6.0.0 is the latest version. I’m currently running 6.5.0-25-generic.
I’ve been on Neon since Plasma 5 came out and there have been a couple of annoyances like the wine dependency or the background updater recently yeeting my bootloader. I also had the issue with the black screen after the upgrade, though I was lucky to fix it within 10 minutes. After that the power buttons in my start menu were broken (how do you not notice this in testing?) and Konsole can’t be launched from Dolphin anymore. At least the first one was fixed a day later.
I guess that’s what I get for being on a distro that promises to deliver the most recent KDE updates as soon as they come out, but I can’t help but be a little disappointed to have severe instabilities happen on an “official” distro like this.
Tbh I’ve never used anything other than Nvidia hardware on Linux and I’ve only ever had some minor annoyances over the past 10 years. Nvidia has a bad rep in this community because of the closed source drivers, not so much because of stability or compatibility.
Have they stated what license they’ll be using for the model?
“You are on this council, but we do not grant you the rank of master.”
Correction: The Thinkpad is not optional.
Tabs in the file manager
Straight up using the KDE motto
I wonder if anyone has actually managed to do this
Most software on Linux is configured to place their config files in ~/.config. Some others, like the ones in the pic, just dump them directly into your home folder.
Heresy. It was gods will to not include networking capabilities.
Yeah, you got it right. The advantage of this method is that you create masks based on things like outlines and color ranges and at higher resolutions. You can also blur areas of the mask to better blend it into the image.
Awesome, glad I could help!
If you do not want to do the inpainting directly in the web interface, you’ll have to upload a “alpha mask” of the area that you want to inpaint.
Here’s an example:
Let’s say this is your image. You open it in a editor that supports layers like Gimp. You add a transparent layer on top and draw the area that you want to inpaint over it in black. It should look like this.
Next, you replace the color layer with a white layer. It will look like this:
This is the image that you save and what you upload to the Automatic1111 web interface. Feel free to ask if you have any questions.
I voted for the “Half Gear” because I always loved that design, but I gotta admit that the Triangles look pretty cool and a bit more modern.
I guess that explains the licensing for their recent video models. I hope they will continue to release their models for private use though, there is no other company in the generative AI space that has done more for open source.
Huh, that’s pretty impressive.
Microsoft is the “Linux salesman of the year” because most people switching to Linux do it just because Windows has become so terrible.