

“Windows meme makers, can you go five seconds without revealing your appalling lack of technical curiosity?”
Windows Meme Makers: “The C drive! … How long was that?”
I like coffee, Philly, Pittsburgh, Arabic language, anything on two wheels, music, linux, theology, cats, computers, pacifism, art, unity, equity, etymology, the power of words, and getting high off airplane glue. Will use Adobe Illustrator for food.
“Windows meme makers, can you go five seconds without revealing your appalling lack of technical curiosity?”
Windows Meme Makers: “The C drive! … How long was that?”
A paycheck is a paycheck. Lots of us exchange our ego for daily bread — we have a club and everything. We meet every day after work at your local bar.
Oh yeah. Don’t you guys also do murder scene remediation?
“Computer, fix this code and don’t make mistakes.”
Neato. Always cool to see a new approach. Synapse/Matrix is excellent, but, running a federated Matrix server is an exercise in frustration. So many version forks, so many hard crashes. :(
Fair enough. 👌
I respect that, but I built my own Tiny11 iso. You can do so as well here: https://github.com/ntdevlabs/tiny11builder
Folks gotta give me a little benefit of the doubt. I’m not raw-doggin’ the modern Windows experience here.
Good looking out, I’ll check it out.
I’m really not far off. Once my Tiny11 install breaks, it’s on to Bazzite.
You don’t have to explain that kind of stuff, you know. I understand the notion, but, I promise you, it is immaterial to the joke I was making on this shitposting forum.
echo "echo "\Please don't hack me. I'm just a little guy. 👶"\" > ~/.bashrc
Most InfoSec researchers are unaware that most hackers can be stopped by saying “please.”
If you say so. I’m just trying to be helpful instead of offering scare quotes.
There is a cool self-hosted version of Perplexity out there now, called Perplexica
. It can be configured to use Ollama (local inferencing) and your own, self-hosted SearXNG instance to do the actual search and collation.
I have been using it for a week and it really works.
Funkwhale works nice, but honestly, I am a big fan of just using mpd
and piping the audio over a networked speaker, but I’m a simple boy with simple needs.
I worked with one of the inventors of IPv6 for a bit of time, and I think knowing Carl really gave me an insight into who IPv6 was invented for, and that’s the big, big, big networks — peering groups that connect large swaths of the Internet with other nations’ municipal or public infrastructure.
These groups are pushing petabytes of data every hour, and as a result, I think it makes their strategists think VERY big picture. From what I’ve seen, IPv6 addresses very real logistical problems you only see with IPv4 when you’re already dealing with it on a galactic scale. So, I personally have no doubt that IPv6 is necessary and that the theory is sound.
However, this fuckin’ half-in/half-out state has become the engine of a manifold of security issues, primarily bc nobody but nerds or industry specialists knows that much about it yet. That has led to rushed, busy, or just plain lazy devs and engineers to either keep IPv6 sockets listening, unguarded, or to just block them outright and redirect traffic to IPv4 anyway.
Imo there’s not much to be done besides go forward with IPv6. It’s there, it’s tested, it’s basically ready for primetime in terms of NIC chip support… I just wish it weren’t so obtuse to learn. :/
Finally, somebody looking out for the faceless among us.
Nah, as someone who gave an honest, college try at making use of OneDrive, I maintain its fate vis a vie the rusty hook.