azdle

@azdle@news.idlestate.org
10 Post – 84 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

You're an Agnostic.

Agnosticism is the view or belief that the existence of God, the divine, or the supernatural is either unknowable in principle or unknown in fact.

We tried that in the 90s, it went poorly: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trans_fat#History

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If your distro offers it, rootless podman + podman system service is the best setup, IMO. That will give you a docker command that is 1-to-1 compatible with docker and lets you use tools like docker-compose that expect a docker service socket. Then you can just follow tutorials that only explain things for docker.

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If you have any straight straws, you might want to hold them up to the light. They get pretty grody on the inside.

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They may block IP addresses associated with consumer ISPs. Assuming that's the case, I would guess you're seeing that as an HSTS/TLS error because their network is trying to trick your browser into redirecting to/displaying an error page hosted by some part of their network.

I keep thinking about installing this, but the required permissions seem a bit excessive:

This add-on needs to:

  • Input data to the clipboard
  • Access your data for all websites

Anyone know if the 'All Access' permission is really required for what this is doing? It just feels wrong. There isn't some sort of "Control Navigation for These Domains" that it could request for each enabled site or something is there?

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The day Firefox shutters its doors is the day the internet truly dies.

*the web

The internet has so far been doing a much better job surviving as a proper decentralized system than the web.

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I'll start off with a proviso, I haven't s much touched my Librem 5 in at least a year (maybe even 2?), so if they've had some massive turn around in that time I don't know about it. All of this post is just what I think I remember, if you want actual facts go dig around in the wayback machine or something.

The promise of the L5 was super grandiose. They were going to create this mobile device that could completely replace your android device. It was going to launch with a custom matrix client that would let you make voice and video calls, which no other matrix client at the time could do. It was gonna be great and it was going to be delivered in a year.

Now clearly that was never going to go off without a hitch. I don't blame them for being late nor for not delivering all their promises right at launch. But when things started getting delayed they seemed to be doing everything in their power to not communicate with backers. And anytime they would say something, they would say "well we didn't hit that deadline, but we promise we're totally super duper close now". And then they'd blow through that deadline without a word too.

I did eventually get my phone, obviously, but it wasn't anything like a usable device. The battery that it came with was smaller than advertised and it didn't have any power management so you got a few hours of battery life. The cameras just didn't exist as far as the software was concerned. The privacy switches would randomly kill power to the modem when you lightly brushed against them without the switch moving out of the 'on' position. Which was super annoying since you had to reboot the phone any time you wanted to turn the modem back on. And rebooting took ages.

Even at this point I was still rooting for them to succeed. I really want a proper Linux phone and have since 2008.

But ever since then, I really haven't seen much of anything change with the software, at least for as long as I was paying attention to it. One of the cameras got support added by a community member at some point, but the pictures it was taking were so bad it looked like some 1999 digital camera taking pictures in a dimly lit room even in full sunlight. There was no way to know if an application in their store was going to work or not, most didn't, mostly because they were meant for a larger screen & a mouse.

I pulled it out a few times on and off over the years, but the last time I did, I couldn't even figure out how to get it to update. So, I haven't really even touched it since then. (I've got it out connected to power to see what it's like now. Though, I'm not sure it's charging, is flashing green (with an occasional flicker of red) a good thing?)

Since receiving it, the only communication I've gotten from Purism has been "Investment Opportunities". I'm not sure why I'd invest in a company that still hasn't delivered what it promised me over 5 years ago.

I absolutely want them to succeed, and I hope they prove my pessimism wrong, but at this point I absolutely would not put my money on that happening.

Direct links:

Deck: https://store.steampowered.com/steamdeck

  • 64GB: $399.00 -10% $359.10
  • 256GB: $529.00 -15% $449.65
  • 512GB: $649.00 -20% $519.20

Dock: https://store.steampowered.com/steamdeckdock

  • $89.00 -20% $71.20
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Yep, the extra sad thing is that there are actually sold listings too: https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=steam+deck+OLED&rt=nc&LH_Sold=1&LH_Complete=1

Some people just can't be helped, I guess.

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Defense in depth. If something escapes the container it's limited to only what's under that user and not the whole system. Having access to the whole system makes it easier for malware to hide/persist itself.

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I think you found an extra factor of a thousand somewhere along the way. I get 497 cubic meters: https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=%280.0043+inches+*+2.61+inches+*+6.14+inches%29+*+%2844+billion+%2F+100%29

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Update the controller firmware.

I've got the "Xbox Wireless Controller", the one that has a little bit of a grippy texture on the handles & the 'd-pad on a circle' d-pad. And I was seeing the same thing before updating the FW ~a year (maybe even two?) ago.

Unfortunately, doing that requires a Windows PC or an Xbox.

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The top white rectangle is a multi-color LED (presumably RGB). Can't make out what's in the bottom, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was some form of light sensor for (literally) flashing new information onto the tag.

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It has definitely changed, I don't know when, but it's been like this for at least the last decade.

Though, in my experience (NB: I'm a software engineer, which is a notoriously lax field.) only what the piece of paper says has changed. Hell, most of my employee handbooks have claimed that "full time" is 50 hours a week. They get away with it because I'm classified as a "computer employee" (lol) and make more than $35k/year (super lol) which means my employment is exempted from minimum wage and overtime pay laws.

Nobody that I know actually works that consistently. Most people I know don't even do 40. I do 9-5 (or 8:30-4:30 usually), I take breaks when I need them and nobody has ever complained to me about the amount I'm working.

My only guess for why it's this way is that having that be the official working time means it's easier to fire anyone for no reason because they're not working their "contractually obligated" amount of time.

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Assuming you meant de-federate, there are a few listed on https://fedipact.online/ that seem to be lemmy instances.

Bad Bot! You stripped out the only important part of the article:

For the special Limited Edition version Valve has said:

You need to be in the United States or Canada.
Your account needs to be in good standing.
Your account needs to have made a purchase on Steam before November 2023.
Only one unit may be purchased per account.

If their experiment with this extra Limited Edition model goes well, we may see others come in future.

Additionally, their FAQ also notes for the normal 512GB and 1TB Steam Deck OLED models you will only be able to purchase "1 model of Steam Deck OLED per customer per week" but they plan to relax that when they're confident they can meet demand.

Also, the LE is still showing as in-stock for me: https://store.steampowered.com/sale/steamdeck_2023LE

I think the OOS labels it showed a couple times might have just been from the servers getting overloaded.

Apex Legends is verified: https://www.protondb.com/app/1172470

The finals doesn't work because of anti-cheat: https://www.protondb.com/app/2073850

Edit: World of Warships is playable: https://www.protondb.com/app/552990

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It supports them already, there just aren't any provided by default. They're called Bookmark Keywords: https://github.com/jameshealyio/bang-bookmarks

I'd suggest not importing all of them from that list though, there's a crap load, just pick the ones you want and put them in manually.

This is about "fees" over and above the advertised "price". So it says your plan is $65/month, but when you get your bill it's actually $95 because there's a "Cost Recovery Fee", a "Network Maintenance Fee", and a "Municipal Area Surcharge" (IIRC all real fees I've paid on an internet bill) on top of the advertised rate. They're often meant to look like taxes, but they aren't.

Obligatory IANAL, but I think they can't really make it closed source, because it's a whole bunch of code they don't own the copyright to that's under the GPL.

For Red Hat customers and partners, source code will remain available via the Red Hat Customer Portal.

Which I think means the Rocky people would just need someone who is a RH customer to share the source with them or pay for a license themselves. The GPL really only requires you to make the source available to your customers, not necessarily publicly available to anyone, but it still explicitly allows any of their customers to redistribute it freely.

Though, maybe I'm not fully correct on that, because that would mean that this basically accomplishes nothing besides making RH/IBM look bad.

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The exact laws vary by state, but it's always "get the fuck out the way, as quickly as you can while being as predictable as possible."

I've never heard that you're supposed to not stop (if that's what you meant), but as far as I know, you're not required to stop if you're out of the way and not preventing anyone else from getting out if the way.

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It's for a hook to keep the handset on when the phone is mounted flat on a wall. It can usually be slid/folded down or removed when its not need.

Oh, I'm confident(-ish) in my ability to review the code, but as I understand it I have no way to guarantee that the code that's on github is the code that AMO installs. Plus updates are automatic, so I have no way to ensure that something malicious won't be added anyway.

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Its a non-powered version of a hot shoe, both of which are the thing you use to mount an external flash that's on the top of a lot of (all?) full sized cameras.

IMO, yes. Docker (or at least OCI containers) aren't going anywhere. Though one big warning to start with, as a sysadmin, you're going to be absolutely aghast at the security practices that most docker tutorials suggest. Just know that it's really not that hard to do things right (for the most part[^0]).

I personally suggest using rootless podman with docker-compose via the podman-system-service.

Podman re-implements the docker cli using the system namespacing (etc.) features directly instead of through a daemon that runs as root. (You can run the docker daemon rootless, but it clearly wasn't designed for it and it just creates way more headaches.) The Podman System Service re-implements the docker daemon's UDS API which allows real Docker Compose to run without the docker-daemon.

[^0]: If anyone can tell me how to set SELinux labels such that both a container and a samba server can have access, I could fix my last remaining major headache.

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Yep! I got one.

Got it into my cart within seconds, didn't even get through more than the cart screen before I started getting 502 errors. Eventually went out of stock. But, showed back in stock a few minutes later and I was able to get my order in. My order email shows 12:29 (10:29 PST).

Already had a 512 Deck that I got in Feb 2022, but when you combine mainstream Linux gaming, OLED, and a translucent shell, apparently I have no self-control.

Meat doesn't grow in the suburbs either though. Plus if you're buying meat at a major supermarket, it probably didn't even come from your state anyway. Your proximity to the nearest cow doesn't have much to do with how far your steak came.

As someone who is currently hiring: Anything

Beyond that it depends on what you know and what kind of work you want to do.

This is their meta site: https://obeythesystem.com/ It doesn't seem to list it. Neither does their network status page: https://biomonitor.cyberwa.re/status/network

I don't know anything, but that seems to imply to me that it's probably not coming back.

Your thoughts.

(And to a lesser extent your actions, but that gets tougher to define since external factors will apply more there.)

IMO, the best free option is https://freedns.afraid.org/. The biggest downside of that one is that you have to login a couple times a year (IIRC?) to keep it active. I actually still use this even though I have a paid domain, I just CNAME my real domains to the afraid dynamic name. That was easier than changing the config every time I become unhappy with my domain registrar and have to reconfigure everything after swapping.

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That's not really possible with docker TBH, and I say that as a diehard Podman advocate. Docker, the tooling that you install with your package manager, is open source. Sure they have windows and mac desktop stuff that isn't open, but it's not like you're self-hosting with that, right?

Plus there's always Podman to switch to, which can be a (mostly) drop-in replacement, if you want something with a more trustworthy provenience.

Congrats, don't forget to actually play games with it now!

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At work we have a contractual design deliverable that was due yesterday, I still can't get anybody to tell me what I'm supposed to be designing/building. I've got the contract, but its so vague that it's more unhelpful than it is helpful and there's apparently been 9 months of conversations with the customer, none of which have included engineering, nor has anything from them been written down. So we're designing something just based on rumors.

So we're in crunch mode, but also we don't know what we're trying to accomplish... 😩

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They're going to keep selling the 256 LCD, 512 & 1TB are OLED only: https://www.steamdeck.com/en/#skus

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That's a problem anywhere with user generated content & user defined communities. The usual example is that when BOTW came out there were at least half a dozen subreddits created and more than one survived, so there were two that were both really popular at the same time and that's in addition to multiple Zelda and multiple Nintendo subs that might all get the same links/posts.

As far as I'm aware something like that isn't really possible.

  • it would prevent one person from making multiple fake accounts

How do you define 'a person' and how do you ensure that they only have one account? Short of government control of accounts, I don't think you can really guarantee this and even then there's still fraud that gets past the current government systems.

Then, how do you verify that the review is coming from the person that the account is for?

IMO, we'd all be better off going back to smaller scale social interactions, think 'social media towns' you trust a smaller number of people and over time develop trust in some. Then you can scale this out to more people than you can directly know with some sort of web-of-trust model. You know you trust Alice, and you know Alice trusts Bob, so therefore you can trust Bob, but not necessarily quite as much as you trust Alice. Then you have this web of trust relationships that decay a bit with each hop away from you.

It's a rather thorny problem to solve especially since for that to work optimally you'd want to know how much Alice trusts bob, but that amounts to everyone documenting how much they trust each of their friends, which seems socially... well... difficult.

Though the rest is actually easyâ„¢:

  • reviews wouldn’t be suppressed or promoted by paid algorithms
  • the algorithm WOULD help connect people to items they are interested in. But maybe the workings of it would be open source, so it can be audited for bad acting.

You do what the fediverse does, you have all the information available to everyone, then you run your own 'algorithm' that you wrote/audited/trust. The hard part is getting others to give away access to all 'their' data.