Glitch 💻😺
@glitchfur.net
1.6K followers 810 following 330 posts
M / He/Him / Bi / 28 Tech enthusiast cat. Linux user. I use Arch, btw. Mostly SFW. Con Staff. Not a red panda. Don't feed bread!
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WHY DID THEY PUT ME THERE
Screenshot of the very beginning of BLFC 2025's Closing Ceremonies, showing a title card and a very large and squished Glitch "peek" sticker on the right hand side.
Because the "touch-first" interface worked so well with Windows 8 and Cortana worked so well with Windows 10. /s
This is the future of Windows. Microsoft wants to rewrite Windows to turn computers into AI PCs that you talk to. It's now bringing AI features to all Windows 11 PCs today, in a bid to convince you to talk to your PC and let AI control it. Full details 👇 www.theverge.com/news/799768/...
Microsoft wants you to talk to your PC and let AI control it
Copilot Voice and Vision are now rolling out.
www.theverge.com
BLFC is coming up! Who am I gonna see there? 😺 #FursuitFriday
📷: @frooxius.bsky.social
🧵: @roofur.com
Glitch in fullsuit, laying face up on a carpeted floor. His body is coiled around a giant orange ball of yarn, and he is looking at the camera.
I've been informed that "vibe coding" is the actual terminology people have begun using to describe "writing code with AI" and I genuinely can't think of a worse term.
As for the questions of "Glitch why are you making bit-perfect copies of SD cards?" and "Are you insane?" the answers are "Because science" and "Yes".
Problem is virtual machines do that in real time, whereas I am dealing with a full disk image and need to find out after the fact what has changed.

I already tried simply tar-ing the files and passing them though ZSTD, but it doesn't compress as much considering the massive similarities.
So I figure the best way to store or "compress" this information would be to store only the differences between the files, in a manner very similar to how virtual machines can use snapshots to track block-level disk changes in distinct locations.
For more context: Imagine that I have a bit-perfect image of a 32GB microSD card. Then on the real card I add/change/remove some files and I create another copy of the entire card. Now I have two images of this SD card totaling 64GB, but with relatively minor changes between them.
Trying to figure out the best way to efficiently store a set of very large but mostly similar files, and I feel that I already know the proper solution but I'm just not sure how to implement it.
You're all a bad influence.
Screenshot showing the purchase of a Steam Deck 512 GB OLED and a Steam Deck Docking Station.
It's extremely tempting, but also with the LCD version currently being discounted the next higher up OLED version is ~70% more the price of the LCD. Hmm ...
Debating between the discounted Steam Deck LCD version or getting the OLED ...
Or maybe I keep the "blog" format but focus instead on very short "how to do X thing" guides instead of opinionated pieces.
Since my website has been down for years and I can't consistently put out full length articles, I wonder if I should turn it into a wiki instead where I publish my findings about all the things I dabble in.
Difficult to sleep tonight with everything going on ...
I'd really appreciate if I could have more than a day every three months where I feel "normal" and can adult properly, instead of feeling inconsistent about myself all the time.
Out of all the times I've had to replace my tires it has almost exclusively been due to driving over nails ... for some reason.
Besides that, no comment.
Today may be a good day to turn off autoplay.
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IT IS WEDNESDAY MY DUDES
Reposted by Glitch 💻😺
In the latest @resonite.com update, I've made it so when you lag, now you don't!

The renderer can decouple from the main engine and smooth out any hitches and lag spikes and make them less jarring/disruptive - extra useful in VR and when watching videos!

#Resonite #gamedev #socialVR