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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)R
Posts
14
Comments
1213
Joined
2 yr. ago

I take my shitposts very seriously.

  • Watch The Pitt, y'all. It has a much better depiction of ASD, through the chad Dr. King's interactions with her patients and sister. No autistic mind powers, no repeated exclamations of one's desired profession. It's also a bloody good medical drama overall.

  • You make a new normal, non-root user specifically to run Radicale processes. The user should have write access only to Radicale's directories, nothing else.

    Same deal with Apache and the www-data user.

  • University of Minnesota, I remember it well. Considering the importance of the Linux kernel, a lifetime ban and retroactive removal of their contributions was the most polite "fuck off and never come back" they could've received. I personally would've accused them of sabotage.

  • It's probably there to defeat the "well, you didn't tell me not to add malware!" defense.

  • Microsoft developed a tiling window manager before it was cool.

  • Is "prerequisite knowledge" a foreign concept to people these days? When I started writing extensions for Blender, I had to do a lot of legwork to understand the bpy module, and even more fucking legwork to understand Python itself, all that on top of the general knowledge of programming and algorithms from high school.

    RTFM means that you should use the available resources to learn. There's a whole internet full of them. There are no shortcuts to understanding, and you can't expect every task-oriented guide to explain how to write a main().

  • In the real world, the only thing better than perfect is standardized.

  • Fun fact: C:\: is a perfectly valid NTFS path. Windows won't let you create it, though, because Windows doesn't even fully support the NTFS specification. That's why you have to specify the windows_names option when mounting an NTFS filesystem on Linux.

  • The most straight-forward method would be to buy a standalone switch. I have a TP-LINK TL-SG108 8-port gigabit switch and it seems to retain the ARP table indefinitely.

    My previous solution was an ESP32 board with an SSH server and a relay, wired parallel with the power switch, that would be closed by an output pin on command.

  • How much experience do you have with networking, exactly?

    The DNS record points to a private IPv4 address (10.0.0.41), which cannot be accessed from the internet for multiple reasons; first of which is that it's almost certainly behind a NAT gateway.

    Your internet provider has given you a single publicly routable IPv4 address and assigned it to the WAN interface on your modem or router. If you want to access a host on the LAN, you'll first have to configure port mapping or port forwarding on the router. Then you'll have to open holes in your firewall and accept the fact that every bad actor will try to break into that host unless you know how to set up network security.

  • Better out-of-the-box hardware support, in my experience. We have a machine learning server at work, it didn't see the GPUs on Debian Bullseye with the driver versions specified by the manufacturer, but worked perfectly with Ubuntu Server out of the box.

    A distribution that is preconfigured by professionals has great value in a practical setting, even if that value has diminished in the eyes of the kind of person that Lemmy attracts. If I had tried to get Debian working by overruling the manufacturer's instructions, I'd have to take responsibility for it, both its maintenance and the downtime and potential damage if I had fucked something up. With Ubuntu, I get to delegate at least part of the responsibility to Canonical (while covering my own ass), and that's something you can't backport.

  • It's not about saving ten seconds of typing. It's about supporting OP's claim with credible sources. And I have to stress credible because mainstream journalism has a tendency to turn unverified or downright false claims into a woozle.

  • Linux has two different kinds of "used" memory. One is memory allocated for/by running processes that cannot be reclaimed or reallocated to another process. This memory is unavailable. The other kind is memory used for caching (ZFS, write-back cache, etc) that can be reclaimed and allocated for other things as needed. Memory that is not allocated in any way is free. Memory that is either free or allocated to cache is available.

    It looks like htop only shows unavailable memory as "used", while proxmox shows the sum of unavailable and cached memory. Proxmox "uses" 11 GB, but it's not running out of memory because most of it is "available".

  • In his newest (and worst) How Do You Do Fellow Kids moment, Mark Zuckerberg launches the Poob service, accessible exclusively through the Metaverse. What does it do? Fucked if we know.

  • Not on my own, I'm technically only responsible for the network and cybersecurity, but not being able to log out of an education account on a public computer is a pretty serious threat. Fortunately I'm on good terms with the dean and he's always been receptive to my concerns.

  • As a university sysadmin that spent half a fucking hour yesterday trying to log someone out of a classroom computer's MS Office software (the "sign out" button did fuck all, go figure): fuck Microsoft, fuck Office, fuck Outlook, fuck Onedrive, fuck their SSO, and their mother too. Next semester I'm sanitizing the computers. Students will use LibreOffice and they'll like it.

    I might be a little angry.

  • adduser is an interactive wrapper for useradd. It can, for example, prompt the user to set a password rather than execute passwd separately. Very useful if you just want to manage a user without reading through useradd's command line options, then running usermod because you forgot to set something.

    It doesn't excuse the bad naming, I'd rather have something like useradd --interactive, but it's worth remembering.

  • Fuck it. uses ulong to store a boolean

  • I wish my one bad experience in 2015 had been the absolute last time Pulse failed for anyone ever. Alas, time doesn't work that way, and Pulse remained failure-prone for years after my encounter with it.