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#customization

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@Catvalente

Or just use you AI locally 🦾 💻 🧠

I completely understand the concerns about relying too heavily on AI, especially cloud-based, centralized models like ChatGPT. The issues of privacy, energy consumption, and the potential for misuse are very real and valid. However, I believe there's a middle ground that allows us to benefit from the advantages of AI without compromising our values or autonomy.

Instead of rejecting AI outright, we can opt for open-source models that run on local hardware. I've been using local language models (LLMs) on my own hardware. This approach offers several benefits:

- Privacy - By running models locally, we can ensure that our data stays within our control and isn't sent to third-party servers.

- Transparency - Open-source models allow us to understand how the AI works, making it easier to identify and correct biases or errors.

- Customization - Local models can be tailored to our specific needs, whether it's for accessibility, learning, or creative projects.

- Energy Efficiency - Local processing can be more energy-efficient than relying on large, centralized data centers.

- Empowerment - Using AI as a tool to augment our own abilities, rather than replacing them, can help us learn and grow. It's about leveraging technology to enhance our human potential, not diminish it.

For example, I use local LLMs for tasks like proofreading, transcribing audio, and even generating image descriptions. Instead of ChatGPT and Grok, I utilize Jan.ai with Mistral, Llama, OpenCoder, Qwen3, R1, WhisperAI, and Piper. These tools help me be more productive and creative, but they don't replace my own thinking or decision-making.

It's also crucial to advocate for policies and practices that ensure AI is used ethically and responsibly. This includes pushing back against government overreach and corporate misuse, as well as supporting initiatives that promote open-source and accessible technologies.

In conclusion, while it's important to be critical of AI and its potential downsides, I believe that a balanced, thoughtful approach can allow us to harness its benefits without sacrificing our values. Let's choose to be informed, engaged, and proactive in shaping the future of AI.

CC: @Catvalente @audubonballroon
@calsnoboarder @craigduncan

Dash to Panel GNOME Extension Gets Big Update

A big update to the perennially popular GNOME Shell extension Dash to Panel is rolling out, including new settings to go from Dash to Panel to dock mode! Admittedly, that doesn’t sound like a new feature given that Dash to Panel is based on code from Dash to Dock. Yet, until now, those wanting the unified panel of Dash to Panel with the aesthetic of a dock… Had to make do with an inelegant fudge, or switch extension. No more; when whim and want demands a dynamic dock setup, Dash to Panel’s preferences area can help, making it easier to :sys_more_orange:
#News #Customization #DashToPanel #EyeCandy #GnomeExtensions

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/03/dash-t

How to Disable (or Change) Login Sound in Ubuntu 24.10

When you log in to Ubuntu 24.10 an audio clip plays to greet you — a lengthy audio clip that slowly builds to a plinky-plonky crescendo that you—or those around you—may tire of having to sit through! But you can turn Ubuntu’s startup sound off, or swap it for an audio clip more to your tastes. Startup and login sounds were a staple part of Ubuntu during its formative years, but the distro decided to disable them in Ubuntu 12.04 LTS after getting feedback that, actually, they could be a bit annoying. Some 12 years Ubuntu 24.10 added a startup :sys_more_orange:
#HowTo #Customization #Loginsounds #Ubuntu24_10

:sys_omgubuntu: omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/02/disabl

Does anybody know a good way to clean up the drop-down menu for posts in Mastodon?

I don't need most of these options and its very hard to find the right one quickly with so many to select from.

I tried uBlock origin's cosmetic filters with the element picker, but apparently the elements are not defined, by what they do, but by their order in the drop-down menu and then when I block one element, another one in another menu gets blocked too.

Also the order changes based on who's post I'm selecting.
So while using the cosmetic filter makes it much faster to find the element that I use the most (the filter option), but often elements are hidden, that I do need to and then I have to disable cosmetic filters altogether for a while.

All in all its not really much of a time-saver.

(Actually the perfect solution for me would be to put the filter option in the interaction elements row, but I guess that would require programming and maintaining a custom theme.)