dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️

Progenitor of the Weird Knife Wednesday feature column. Is “column” the right word?

I make knives now, too. Why not buy one at flightlessforge.com?

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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: July 20th, 2023

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  • Probably, if they wanted to. The historical writing is on the wall that they don’t want to, though, as part of whatever their business strategy is. Fear of legal complications due to overtly being a for-profit commercial enterprise might also have something to do with it.

    Microsoft is already quite infamous for e.g. going so far as to license third party .zip decompressing code to build into Windows Explorer rather than develop their own, code which apparently nobody in Redmond could be bothered to understand and thus to this very day the .zip archive handling capabilities of Explorer remain frozen and time from the XP era and so rinky-dink that they pale in comparison to commandline tools from the '90s. That’s let alone compared to something like 7-Zip.

    This also raises the issue of having to maintain said code over subsequent releases and continually update it to support evolving standards, etc., which not only isn’t free but presents no obvious mechanism for extracting any revenue from anybody to offset that cost. The current plan of simply outsourcing the entire problem to its rightsholders and passing the licensing cost directly to the consumer allows Microsoft to handily wash their hands of the entire affair, enabling them to devote more resources to trying to shoehorn Copilot AI into the character map or the registry editor, or whatever the fuck.


  • VLC relies on open source media decoding libraries and projects. Thanks to the mechanisms and math behind many video/audio encoding schemes being public knowledge due to whitepapers on the topics in question being available and so forth, these can be reverse engineered by dedicated nerds who are way better at this sort of thing than me. As long as you’re not explicitly circumventing DRM there’s nothing the owners of proprietary codecs can do to anyone making a compatible decoding library in a clean room fashion, especially as mentioned elsewhere nobody is charging any money in the process. You’re licensing the code, not the method.

    I imagine this is at least partially why the Jean-Baptiste Kempf is so adamantly against selling, monetizing, or allowing the VLC project to be bought out in any way whatsoever.



  • I’m going to give a non-answer here, but spend some words pointing out that there is an entire TV Trope explicitly named after the phenomenon contributing to much of the current-day Seinfeld hate, namely that it feels trite and predictable only when viewed through the lens of modernity. Seinfeld is unfunny as we decry that it’s all been done before, forgetting that it’s only been done before because Seinfeld did it first and lots of others imitated in the wake of its popularity. In its era it was actually truly groundbreaking, in a way that Friends definitely was not.

    Seinfeld (along with Married… With Children) was the original raunchy sitcom that broke the genre free from bland family friendly predictability and opened up the possibility of one being entertainment aimed squarely and indeed only at adults. The core cast of Seinfeld are all terrible people, in retrospect probably because Jerry Seinfeld himself was writing from what he knew, where nobody learns the important lesson at the end of the episode on purpose. Sex, relationships, and even failed relationships were openly discussed. There is no central family unit, and every family we are shown in any detail (mainly Jerry’s and especially George’s) are highly dysfunctional. Before it, the concept of an episode having A and B plotlines that intersect and eventually entangle with each other hadn’t been done, even though this is such a staple that it’s outright expected of any show today. It had a deliberately misanthropic sense of humor that was the perfect fit for the cynical point in history in which it occupied.

    In a way Friends is aspirational, an idealized imagining of a hypothetical urban lifestyle that the viewer may hope to achieve even if they don’t personally identify with it. Seinfeld, conversely, is an outright freakshow. You are on the outside looking in at these vain and deceitful people much like a jar full of scorpions someone’s just shaken so they’ll fight. And you’re glad to be on the outside of it, because you really don’t want to be them. But there is a certain bile attraction to it nevertheless, a sort of twisted catharsis in that despite how horrible and selfish as the core cast may be they are also somehow able to live without remorse, speak without filters, and act out without consequences in ways that we only wish we could get away with. (The fact that they spout so many zingers and precipitate so many quotable moments probably also helps.)



  • PLA itself absolutely is food safe, and a significant plurality of plastic disposable forks and spoons are made from it these days. (To be clear [edit], this is the material itself typically in an injection moulded final product. FDM 3D printed objects made out of it are not food safe, at least not more than once, because of the layer lines in which bacteria and other cooties can hide.)



  • Insofar as I can determine, a parts diagram from one of the myriad of models your gun is cloned from, or vise-versa, is available in this manual here. Here’s the relevant excerpt if you don’t want to load a .pdf:

    Alas, the part numbers on that diagram don’t seem to go anywhere. Allegedly the sear from the Tokyo Marui L96 fits these, including the various aftermarket upgrade options for the same. The actual sear is in position 08-3 in the lowermost assembly on that diagram, dead center along the top right edge.

    It is unlikely you will be able to reshape or grind the sear such that it works correctly again. The problem will undoubtedly be that the surface on it that matters has been worn away. It’s similarly unlikely you’ll be able to add any material back to it. It’s also probably cast out of potmetal, so it’s not like you could weld on it or anything. You can get a new steel aftermarket upgrade sear for around $30 online, which is probably the simplest option.

    Manufacturing your own for this would be a fraught undertaking for somebody who didn’t already have the equipment and experience. I’m sure it’s possible, but don’t hold your breath on results if it’s your first time making a precision mechanical component from scratch. However, if you have access to a 3D printer it should be reasonably simple to print a very temporary replacement (printed plastics are unlikely to last more than a couple of shots) to verify that the sear was indeed the problem.

    But it probably is.




  • Compared to various Xbox models, the PlayStation models were generally custom designed to a specific set of hardware and software criteria that aren’t fully mirrored on Windows PC.

    While we’re kibitzing about it, both the PS4 and PS5 are literally AMD x86 based PCs with AMD integrated GPUs stuffed into a plastic shell and running proprietary software. Said proprietary software is the only tricky bit, but both systems’ OS is based on FreeBSD. The OS has its own set of proprietary graphics APIs because Sony is gonna Sony, but they’re still talking to a commodity AMD GPU which could just as easily find its home in a PC.

    There is nothing new under the sun for the Playstation platform since the PS3, which was arguably the last interesting iteration.





  • This has always been an option, but up until now has required changing a setting in group policy (pro/enterprise) or making a registry tweak (home). I would wager that they’re simply exposing this policy setting to end users within the regular UI.

    In the local group policy editor, it’s located in:

    Local Computer Policy \ Computer Configuration \ Administrative Templates \ Windows Components \ Search
    
    Do Not Allow Web Search → Enabled 
    Don’t search the web or display web results in search → Enabled
    

    This also works with Windows 10, despite the article focusing on Windows 11.

    There are corresponding registry entries for these but I don’t know where off the top of my head since I run the Enterprise IoT version and can just use the group policy editor. (Pretty much all local policies simply twiddle the relevant registry bits for you.)




  • I wish I had foam. My house was built in the 1920s and as such has plaster walls over lath, with a layer of studs behind and asbestos siding over the exterior sheath. Did you notice what’s missing from that list? That’s right: Insulation!

    I insulated the shit out of my roof when I had the ceiling out of the second story (there is no attic), but the walls basically may as well just not be there as far as the season’s temperature is concerned, whatever it is. Somehow, some way, I’m going to have to stab holes through the plaster and blow in some insulation material. The bottoms of the exterior walls are literally open into the basement, though, so I have some work to do down there first.

    On the bright side, this place was built back when they were still using real timber so it’s probably not going to fall down until much later after all of the other new construction around here.