Skip Navigation

Posts
12
Comments
262
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Depends on your country.

    Where I live you have to take 35 ( 45 min long ) driving lessons from a driving instructor and then you are able to apply for a test for a driving license.

    And if you fail you have to do 5 more each failure, so getting a drviving license here costs at minimum 1.4k euro up to how many times you fail ( each failure will cost you another 175 euro )

  • Like almost all my friends? It's the reason we are friends.

  • Depends on what you run on your system, but when my system idles my cpu is at literal 0%, ram at 600mb and disk usage is 0% (nvme), which ends up my total power usage to about 3W on idle or something like.

    It's a laptop so doesn't use a lot.

  • Sorry, but to clarify no. When your kernel updates if you just log out and log back in you will still keep the same kernel version because linux keeps running a program on same version until you completely turn the program off.

    That's why with the kernel and kernel modules you need to completely restart your system for the kernel to shutdown and use the updated version, it's just the way that linux works.

    Hell you can even use a program after uninstalling it until you close it for a year if you wanted to ( once untistalled my termninal emulator, but still had it's window opened so just reinstalled it an hour later after realising I can't spawn a new terminal window )

  • I just keep my laptop on for weeks on end, until the kernel updates or something else that needs a restart, last 6 months I prob only turned it off 7 times.

    And no, I don't really feel any effects cause it's linux which doesm't get clogged up like windows and power usage just idling is the same as just suspending.

    Also personally don't use stuff like suspend or hibernate ever. Even have them completely disabled on my systems.

    Note: I'm on nixos not ubuntu tho.

  • My average dream as linux user of 8 years.

  • While I'm 5'9 (176cm) with size 12 ( man 45 europe ) shoes since I was 15/16 ( same height and foot size since that age )

  • Butchering, I live on a farm and butcher sheep/lamb and chicken is second nature to me ( started when I was 12 )

  • Me who still has a 512gb ssd that is always atleast 150gb free.

  • Some classics you guys recommend getting?

  • Which you still need to specifically specify. By default everything still has to be compiled.

  • stop

    Jump
  • Only monad I know is xmonad. My favourite x11 window manager.

  • I remeber using plasma on a weak 2016 160 usd laptop with no issue in 2018, I can only imagine how much better is now

  • From what I know it's the people who are using asahi linux in general and it's drivers.

    Heard he got sent death threats.

  • To not be bored.

  • You could easilly just make a bash script for that

  • Neovim ( not heavilly customized, mostly just lsp+trisitter and mini.nvim for a lot of other stuff ) and tmux ( which is also barelly customized + sesh for sessiond management. Also have it start automatically whem opening my terminal ).

    Started using neovim right away when switching to linux back in 2018, started using tmux only last year and it's a godsend for even just regular terminal work not just with neovim.

    I also reccomend for anybody who tries to learn neovim to learn touch typing and get to atleast 60wpm, it's a big difference.

  • I'm using the default list alongside Firehol BotScout list and Firehol cybercrime tracker list set to ban.

    Also using the Firehol cruzit.com list set to do captcha, just in case it's not actually a bot.

    I'm also using the cs-firewall-bouncer and a custom bouncer that's shown on crowdsecs tutorials to detect privilege escalation for if anybody actually manages to get inside.

    Alongside that I'm using a lot of scenario collection's for specific software I'm using like nextcloud, grafana, ssh, ... which helps a lot with attacks directly done on a service and not just general scraping or both path traversing.

    All free and have been using it for a year, only complaint I have is that I had to make a cronjob to restart the crowdsec service every day because it would stop working after a couple days because of the amount of requests it has to process.

  • And the comminity blocklists are updated when more than a couple ( I think the number is something like 10-50 ) instances of crowdsec block an ip in some fast timeframe.

    The ai blocklist just adds IP when even one instance finds an AI trying to scrape right from the useragent.

    So even if the community blocklist has fewer ai ip's, it does eventually include them.