Old office firesale OEM Dell optiplex 5040 w/ i7 -6700 chipset Upgraded with extra ram and nvme. No GPU.
Dual monitor setup (one 5:4 for that pre 2010 vibe)

Mint with Cinnamon. Programs - Yoshimi, CMUS, xed, htop and Ollama running Llava:7b in cool-retro-term.

  • @[email protected]
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    25 hours ago

    What are you doing, though? What’s going on, on the left screen? Why do you need a virtual midi keyboard? Wouldn’t it be hard to use with a mouse? Wouldn’t assigning each piano key to a key on your physical keyboard work a little better? Or something like that.

    I’m not trying to judge you, I’m just stupid.

    • @leonardOP
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      24 hours ago

      Left screen is me bullying an AI in a themed terminal. Just for fun. Virtual midi keyboard (glad you asked) is yoshimi, which assigns the keys automatically to your keyboard. I was actually playing along to some music [playing in cmus] using a 25 key midi sampler. The virtual keyboard shows me which key is being pressed [a blue dot appears on the relevant key]
      https://yoshimi.github.io/docs/user-guide/starting/starting.html You know what, install yoshimi and use it. It’s great fun.

      • @[email protected]
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        24 hours ago

        I can just imagine my whole-ass piano glaring at me while I use my computer to play midi music!

        Thanks for the reply. I might try that out.

    • @leonardOP
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      15 hours ago

      Well, I do have other computers that are much better suited for it. One of them even has its own room, laid out specifically for that purpose ;). But that’s a different post for a different sub, maybe.

  • @[email protected]
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    26 hours ago

    They aren’t wrong IMO - if you don’t do anything that requires a lot of processing power or really need a lot of slots for peripherals, PCI cards and drives, you might as well connect your external display, keyboard and mouse to a laptop. It gives you the option to take the entire thing with you, and a lot of people have spare laptops anyway.

    I know plenty of people who don’t even use their laptop much because they’re doing everything on their phones or game consoles.

    • @leonardOP
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      14 hours ago

      Yes and no. Use case is the great definer here. This machine has been, and still is, many things; NAS, router, media server, server server, karaoke machine. Hell I even fell for that Chia Coin bingo card bullshit for about a month years back, and pressed it into service to ‘farm’ that with a big old ugly Noctua cooler sticking out of the open case.
      Actually that’s a good example bc doing that shit fried the RAM and if I had been using a laptop with so-dimm and soldered it would have likely grilled the whole board.
      At the moment it’s set up on a work bench desk in a corner of the drawing room where everyone in the household can finger fuck the screens if they wish and I don’t have to worry about it . When kids ask if they can play games on it they either get gzdoom or mame or sent away disappointed.
      Also it is silent. I love silent computers.

      I know plenty of people who don’t even use their laptop much because they’re doing everything on their phones or game consoles.

      Thank you but no.

    • @leonardOP
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      8 hours ago

      Thank you. I like CRT (even if it has its quirks) but always struggled to find a use for it. Then I realised its great with an older monitor and a dumb-as-a-box-of-rocks LLM. It’s like arguing with the bomb from the film Darkstar.