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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/)SC
Posts
11
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1,437
Joined
1 yr. ago

  • Nah, was mostly just making a joke about the other old tech that Japan was notorious for still using.

    Also, I'm really confused WHY eFax is fine but email isn't? I mean, once you lose the verifiability of the phone logs that say your doctor called you at 2:15pm and send 3 pages of shit, uh, you might as well just email a PDF. (Note: I'm in the US and the 'verifiable transmission' thing was why/how we did it for a long time, but that died in about 10 seconds when someone figured out that email was cheaper.)

  • I know we hate Cloudflare, but that's a good feature addition.

    Went to turn it on on the domain covering some of my stuff, and they also directed me to their Radar site, which shows the volume of and which bots are making the most noise, and not the least bit shockingly, it's AI bots all the way down.

    If nothing breaks I'm totally leaving this on and Amazon, Google, and OpenAI can all go screw themselves.

  • I've accomplished this with the Atom Echo and they work... fine?

    The speaker is essentially inaudible, but the mic works well enough for me to just yell at HomeAssistant to do things.

    And hey, can't beat the size/price/power footprint and the deployment with ESPHome takes like, 30 seconds.

  • I've recently moved drives between m2 slots and usb-c enclosures and everything worked, but that's also why I used the word 'should' a lot.

    I've had zero issues in the past few years moving drives around (even between different systems!) and my experience has been nothing but 'shit just works', but yeah, I know that there's probably edge cases where that's not true.

    For what they're doing, though, it should be fine, since there's a relatively low amount of complexity and grub really doesn't care where the drive is as long as it has the UUID at this point.

  • Because I don't sit down at my Linux destop and feel like the product. There's no ads or suggestions or popups or apps installing themselves or shit copying my files around in ways I didn't really want or AI bullshit or anything even remotely suggesting I buy more shit, just... whatever the fuck it is I was intending to do.

    The value in not having my computer act like a damn slot machine trying to get me to insert more quarters is, frankly, immense.

  • As a side note: the grub and root filesystem issues are mostly an issue of the past. If you're on a modern distro (and haven't mucked with things) they no longer use device names, but rather rely on UUIDs, which is good: those don't change even if you move the drives around.

    As long as grub is in the boot sector and you're using UUIDs in your grub.conf and fstab, you should almost never have any issues moving drives around the same system.

  • What confuses me is even a half-competent audit and pentest would absolutely have found an api endpoint that's going to absolutely leak customer data, so the assumption I have to make is that, yet again, a "security" company can't be fucked to do the bare minimum to ensure their security shit is you know, secure.

  • I have watchtower configured to update most, but not all containers.

    It runs after the nightly backup of everything runs, so if something explodes, I've got a backup that's recent and revertible. I also don't update certain types of containers (databases, critical infrastructure, etc.) automatically so that the blast radius of a bad update when I'm not there doing it is limited.

    In the last ~3 years I've had exactly zero instances of 'oops shit's fucked!', but I also don't run anything that's in a massive state of flux and constantly having breaking changes (see: immich).

  • I was doing english lit stuff in that era so what showed up on the tech side was a little different. Ended up spending my entire career actually in IT (25 years now ugh I'm old) because it turns out uh, there's not any money in a english degree.

  • Yeah and as the article mentions, they're not talking DAU/MAU numbers.

    Which means 175 million is a big ol fat marketing lie.

    I'd love to see how many people actually do more than use it once then go 'meh' and go back to scrolling instagram.

  • Agreed. As much as I understand the urge to build your own shiny new thing, I'd pay real actual human money for someone to take Blink, and put it in a non-lobotomized, non-enshittified, non-garbage UI that has things like a self-hosted sync server, built-in adblock/noscript/etc, and the ability to use extensions for things like password managers.

    But no crypto stuff, no gaming stuff, no VPN services, no browser password managers, no sponsored links, no sponsored default search engines, no email client, blah blah blah.

    Browser, adblock, self-hosted sync, done.

  • windows-only ones. Modems

    And, of course, they'd almost never actually SAY that on the box, so you had to see if you could look at what exact chip was on them and explain to a retail employee why you needed to look in the box, and that no, you certainly weren't doing something sketchy, you just use Linux instead of wait why are you calling security...