https://github.com/mozilla/TTS
Also tortoise tts and a few other options
https://github.com/mozilla/TTS
Also tortoise tts and a few other options
It was actually 2022, the year when steam deck released. The proton compatibility shot through the roof. Linux now supports a far wider array of software than MacOS, even.
Yeah, I’m just testing it out. For a true Duolingo experience it would need fill in the blank and audio
We’re talking about, say, learning Spanish and Duolingo be like “now translate this very long and overly specific sentence to English”
Then you end up trying to construct the English sentence even though you’re learning Spanish
Here’s an example where I think my sentence is perfectly fine, but it just expected a different word order. It expected me to put If at the beginning, but I didn’t notice it was capitalized.
Korean doesn’t even have capital letters, why is it doing some gotcha about English capitalization when I already know English?
I have some suggestions: let’s not make people translate to English unless they are learning English. I don’t want to be thinking about whether “I’m coming Friday” is correct grammar in English. I want to be thinking about my target language!
Then you gotta go framework. The ports are all swappable. When you break a port like hdmi you’re basically fucked on a standard laptop. And laptops falling off places is basically guaranteed
Do you know how much money you have to pay to make a RISC V chip? Even less than that, since it’s free
It depends, if you work in a statically typed language you can just use a tool to refactor. I bet a ton of advice is from JavaScript programmers where it’s simply not safe to do this.
My first job doing JavaScript I realized the IDE’s refactor tool wasn’t aware that two variables of the same name were in fact a different variable. Due to how scoping works, it’s hard to write a reliable tool to rename variables for JS. I accidentally introduced a bug renaming a variable.
I’ve never appreciated design decisions made before starting to code. I always have to refactor later when my requirements change or when I realize there’s a better way to do something.
I’d rather be a bad programmer that gets stuff done than a good programmer who’s just jerking off about proper design
t. good programmer
I understand completely, I don’t even update until I need to. In my case, screen capture works more consistently with Wayland than x11.
Xwayland should work basically forever, so there’s no reason to rewrite anything. In time those features will get implemented, but I’m guessing you will need to change the scripts to use something other than wmctrl
unless that particular program gets updated
What is the use case that doesn’t work for you? Mine was Nvidia and now it’s working on gnome at least
If only x11 worked well in the first place. But its many flaws are never going to addressed because the developers only work on Wayland
the mitigations just have bugs, and bugs can be fixed
I’m not convinced it won’t be a thing of the past after some time
The fingerprint doesn’t work on Linux last time I tried
Yes, because it doesn’t have biometric support on Linux
It’s even less cost to switch it there’s nothing to switch