also expensive
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I hadn't heard about Lumen, but I'll look it up, thanks!
wrote last edited by [email protected]Look up Crytek's SVOGI! DF did a fantastic, and brief, showcase: https://youtu.be/w31Ct25gJlI?t=446
Cryengine is back.
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the cars can self drive without a doubt
So can my sister's car for a few seconds if you put the cruise control on. But it can't self-drive safely, and neither can Teslas. But, my sister's car doesn't advertise the ability to self-drive. But, Musk pretends that Telsas can, which is extremely dangerous. He's killing people by muddying the waters and pretending his cars can self-drive safely.
Ok idc about defending tesla anymore. Self driving is cool tech and we can pretend Tesla's cant self drive.
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didn't find the post link again, so here is the account https://infosec.exchange/@Em0nM4stodon
New tech today is just worse tech. Each android update now is just shittier than the previous
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Oh, and my controversial take:
Framework
I feel like Framework started something awesome and... is stalling?
The silicon they use is getting a little long in the tooth, and so is the engineering of the cooling, the screen quality... I get it, they're a scrappy startup, but it almost feels like they're stuck.
Meanwhile the Framework Desktop has awesome hardware, but is largely non modular by necessity and... not available in a laptop? And not very expandable as a desktop, not even with a dGPU slot. And expensive.
I haven't been following them that closely. I hope they come out with new stuff soon though, because I really want them to succeed. Mostly, I want this concept to succeed though. So, if they stumble, I hope someone else picks up the baton.
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Look up Crytek's SVOGI! DF did a fantastic, and brief, showcase: https://youtu.be/w31Ct25gJlI?t=446
Cryengine is back.
Thanks for the recommendation, I added it to my queue.
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Ok idc about defending tesla anymore. Self driving is cool tech and we can pretend Tesla's cant self drive.
Sounds good.
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I'm excited for peer to peer technology, because it brings us closer to what the internet was originally supposed to be like.
I've recommended Keet (chat app) a bunch of times on lemmy earlier, which works really well and that is cool, but that is just a showcase of what's possible with p2p.
Streaming media, sharing files, communication, browsing wikipedia, etc etc - this can be done without spying middlemen or data centres in between. Some cool demos here 09:45 https://youtube.com/watch?v=BTCsSwCpGP8&t=776
Same!! P2p and self hosting is getting better and better!
I've been searching for an alternative chat platform for a while now and I'm yet to find anything I think I can use with friends and Grandma alike, ya know?
so hearing about this p2p keet app got me really excited!
Sadly, after a bit of reading and such, I'm not so sure...
- play-store or github seem to be the only install methods
- the github is release-delivery only; source code doesn't appear to be public?
- Keet uses Holepunch's (the company behind keet) "HyperDHT", a distributed hash table, to connect peers. So it seems that, while the comms themselves might be p2p, the app still relies on some server(s) to facilitate their initial connection.
- good news (kinda) though! You can self host a 'p2p server'! But the phrasing on that doc page reinforces that the network itself isn't fully p2p= "Creates a new server for accepting incoming encrypted P2P connections"
- Installed it anyway just to see. Immediately prompted to enable Google's push notifications via MicroG
- the splash page of the app proudly announces "no servers!" - documentation says otherwise
- creation of a username first checks whether the username is available.... Where is that being checked? No servers, right?
I want this to be cool, but no source code and foggy talk about servers has my sus-dar goin off a little
if anyone knows more I'd love to be persuaded!! The app itself is definitely very beautiful and responsive
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Same!! P2p and self hosting is getting better and better!
I've been searching for an alternative chat platform for a while now and I'm yet to find anything I think I can use with friends and Grandma alike, ya know?
so hearing about this p2p keet app got me really excited!
Sadly, after a bit of reading and such, I'm not so sure...
- play-store or github seem to be the only install methods
- the github is release-delivery only; source code doesn't appear to be public?
- Keet uses Holepunch's (the company behind keet) "HyperDHT", a distributed hash table, to connect peers. So it seems that, while the comms themselves might be p2p, the app still relies on some server(s) to facilitate their initial connection.
- good news (kinda) though! You can self host a 'p2p server'! But the phrasing on that doc page reinforces that the network itself isn't fully p2p= "Creates a new server for accepting incoming encrypted P2P connections"
- Installed it anyway just to see. Immediately prompted to enable Google's push notifications via MicroG
- the splash page of the app proudly announces "no servers!" - documentation says otherwise
- creation of a username first checks whether the username is available.... Where is that being checked? No servers, right?
I want this to be cool, but no source code and foggy talk about servers has my sus-dar goin off a little
if anyone knows more I'd love to be persuaded!! The app itself is definitely very beautiful and responsive
You raise a lot of points here, I recommend you join the community room in the app, you'll get every detail from the developers there.
they haven't opensourced it yet, but they say they will do so, and they have done so with all the components that keet is built on top of. So given that track record, I think it's just a matter of when.
I asked a developer about the dht, in this context a "server" is just a dht node that you can connect to with its public key (but agree it's confusing they use the same word). the wording might be confusing, but its definitively not what anyone understands as a server in a centralized network https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_hash_table
as i've understood, all push notifications on android has to pass through googles servers (but they are encrypted)
and they don't need a server to check for duplicates in usernames
so I recommend you continue to explore and ask around in the chat rooms, figure out if this is for you!
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You raise a lot of points here, I recommend you join the community room in the app, you'll get every detail from the developers there.
they haven't opensourced it yet, but they say they will do so, and they have done so with all the components that keet is built on top of. So given that track record, I think it's just a matter of when.
I asked a developer about the dht, in this context a "server" is just a dht node that you can connect to with its public key (but agree it's confusing they use the same word). the wording might be confusing, but its definitively not what anyone understands as a server in a centralized network https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_hash_table
as i've understood, all push notifications on android has to pass through googles servers (but they are encrypted)
and they don't need a server to check for duplicates in usernames
so I recommend you continue to explore and ask around in the chat rooms, figure out if this is for you!
Cheers for the response! Extremely excited to hear you've heard about open sourcing from the devs, I'm gonna keep my eye out for sure!! Excited to read about dht!
Thanks again for sharing the app!
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Cheers for the response! Extremely excited to hear you've heard about open sourcing from the devs, I'm gonna keep my eye out for sure!! Excited to read about dht!
Thanks again for sharing the app!
yea
the tech is really fascinating. Like yea, the p2p-approach introduces some new challenges, but it solves so many existing ones:
For example costs. The more popular an app gets, the more traffic it gets, the more it costs to run it. I've heard telegram spends hundreds of millions of dollars on servers, with hundreds of developers.
P2P is the complete opposite. Keet is made by a small team, and the more people use it, the better it runs (because more peers can relay data). It can scale with no such restrictions.
someone should do the math of what would be the environmental impact if all communication went p2p instead of datacentres.
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yea
the tech is really fascinating. Like yea, the p2p-approach introduces some new challenges, but it solves so many existing ones:
For example costs. The more popular an app gets, the more traffic it gets, the more it costs to run it. I've heard telegram spends hundreds of millions of dollars on servers, with hundreds of developers.
P2P is the complete opposite. Keet is made by a small team, and the more people use it, the better it runs (because more peers can relay data). It can scale with no such restrictions.
someone should do the math of what would be the environmental impact if all communication went p2p instead of datacentres.
Yeah I have been trying to read a bit more about DHT (good lord these are complicated, one video attempted to explain hypercubes??!
). It seems one of the bigger use cases is in torrenting! Which is fascinating, both from technical and security perspectives.
From what I've learned, it's clear DHT is extremely scalable and resilient, which kicks ass! If it also brings inherent security benefits, I'd say this is a clear choice for a new messaging platform!!
I'll have to learn a bit more first though to be sure.
What I can say is the app itself is GORGEOUS, and very responsive! The devs are also quite active in the community chat room, and seems to listen to (and have full intents to act on) user feedback, which is amazing!
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Yeah I have been trying to read a bit more about DHT (good lord these are complicated, one video attempted to explain hypercubes??!
). It seems one of the bigger use cases is in torrenting! Which is fascinating, both from technical and security perspectives.
From what I've learned, it's clear DHT is extremely scalable and resilient, which kicks ass! If it also brings inherent security benefits, I'd say this is a clear choice for a new messaging platform!!
I'll have to learn a bit more first though to be sure.
What I can say is the app itself is GORGEOUS, and very responsive! The devs are also quite active in the community chat room, and seems to listen to (and have full intents to act on) user feedback, which is amazing!
Oh absolutely. I like the qualitative way they interact with their users. Instead of lots of static pages with lists of issues to vote on, roadmaps, FAQs and that kind of thing, feedback and updates all happen in the chats, interacting with the actual developers. When I make requests or report bugs, ppl chime in and those things actually get addressed, and sometimes fixed really fast. Feels like a digital village!
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Reminder to book your colonoscopy
wrote last edited by [email protected]Fuck you for reminding me, and thank you too.