tool

@tool@r.rosettast0ned.com
2 Post – 105 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

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It's so rare for me to have to use the modulo operator I'm actually excited when I come across a situation where I can.

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This has very strong "I'm not touching you!" energy and I'm all about it.

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Just added it to the massive Google graveyard next to Stadia, wave, hangouts, plus, music, etc etc

I am shocked and appalled that Google Reader didn't get called out in this list and is relegated to the "etc" category.

It deserves more than "etc."

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not like there’s a rapidly growing, decentralized alternative solution out there that is positioned to compete, right Spezzy?

Complex thoughts like this require the ability to self-reflect, and that isn't exactly a trait that raging narcissists are known for.

Places like that never learn their lesson until The Event™ happens. At my last place, The Event™ was a derecho that knocked out power for a few days, and then when it came back on, the SAN was all kinds of fucked. On top of that, we didn't have backups for everything because they didn't want to pay for more storage. They were losing like $100K+ every hour they were down.

The speed at which they approved all-new hardware inside a colocation facility after The Event™ was absolutely hilarious, I'd never seen anything approved that quickly.

Trust me, they're going to keep putting it off until you have your own version of The Event™, and they'll deny that they ever disregarded the risk of it happening in the first place, even though you have years' worth of emails saying "If we don't do X, Y will occur." And when when Y occurs, they'll scream "Oh my God, Y has occurred, no one could have ever foreseen this!"

It'll happen. Wait and watch.

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Is this really that useful though?

It's very useful if you don't use a password manager and/or reuse passwords.

The most useful part about it to me is the API. You can tie it in to Active Directory to blacklist all hashes that appear in any breach, plus expire/force a password change if any user on your domain uses a password that has been in a breach. It completely eliminates that vector from threat actors immediately.

So yeah, I would call this intensely useful.

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I just wished the Lemmy API docs were better lol.

Finnegans Wake makes more sense than Lemmy API docs. Even calling it "documentation" is a stretch.

I literally had to clone the Lemmy git repo and read the source code to find the implementation of an API endpoint and see how it worked for a script that I was writing.

Some places are insanely polluted to the point where you wonder how a whole company could be so braindead and essentially poison themselves.

"That's the future guy's problem, my problem is making money."

No need to wonder. That's how.

Deleting an entire line by hitting x repeatedly

The first time I ever touched Double Ds was in vim.

It's a decade later, and I'm still bitter about Google Reader's unceremonious execution.

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Future incidents probably will still happen

It's not a question of if, but when. The only secure computer is one that's a mile underground, encased in concrete, and with no network connection.

And even then, it's still not a 100% safe bet.

It was a sub that only allowed self text-only posts, no links. People used it as a place for pretty much anything, like getting advice, venting, telling a funny story etc.

The ones that are confirmed have an orange checkmark on them.

I pay for it just because it's cheap and to support them

I did this too when it first came out, and then the product became robust enough that I recommended we implement it at work because secrets management was non-existent. We have a bunch of licenses on the Enterprise plan now and it just keeps getting better each update.

My only complaint is that migrating the data to a new server is a pain in the ass and never works correctly, even when following the migration instructions to the letter. Always have to open a ticket with them for that. Not enough of a pain to move to another product, though.

I also still pay for my personal plan. It really is a fantastic product.

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and how hard it was to get x11 working

Oh good God. If you really want to test someone's resolve, sit them down at an old computer with a CRT and no Internet and have them configure X11 from scratch. Seeing that default X11 crosshatch background for the first time was practically orgasmic after the bullshit I went through to make it work.

That's one of those traumatizing experiences I'd completely blocked from my memory until I read your comment.

Traumatizing experience #2 that just came back to me was getting a winmodem working and connected to my ISP via minicom.

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So I'm not the only one who fried a monitor trying to get X11 working...

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I don't even ask for that anymore because it rarely leads to good ends. What I do now is send an email summarizing the dumb bullshit that they want me to do, describe the detrimental effects that it will have in excruciating detail, ask if there are any corrections and if my understanding is correct, and say that if I don't get a reply from them by X time, I'll do $DumbBullshitThing at Y time/date. It gets CC'ed at least one level higher than them in the food chain and also to my personal email address for CYA.

It puts the onus on them, creates a paper trail, and also places the blame on them when shit blows up because they asked me to do $DumbBullshitThing when the consequences were clearly laid out.

Well you see, finding a way to reliably deliver ads via the API would have taken far too much developer brainpower for a company that can't make a functional video player or a mobile app

It honestly wouldn't be that hard at all. You deliver ads via the API alongside actual posts, as if they are an actual post, and forbid altering them in the developer ToS. If you want to be anal about enforcement, run popular 3rd-party apps in an emulator to verify that the JSON returned by the site is unaltered when it's rendered in the app. You could put this together in a weekend.

Which really just speaks to quality of talent at reddit, or the management at reddit suppressing that talent. Or both.

That's exactly why we need to give them the boot.

Hard disagree. If you're running something business-critical, the support that you get with a RHEL license {or any other vendor, for that matter) is worth its weight in gold.

If you can't fix something, you don't want to be looking for solutions by sifting through forum posts directed at home users when the business is losing thousands of dollars per hour. That's what the license is for, and that's what you pay for.

FYI, you can patch RiF with Revanced to use your own OAuth token. I did it, and it works, but I'm not actually using it anymore/haven't been to reddit for a while.

I just did it as more of a "Fuck you, I won't do what you tell me" thing than anything else.

The stock Pixel phone app has this. If you don't use the stock phone app, you can't use this feature.

At work/for business, you can't beat Veeam. It's the gold standard and there is literally nothing better.

At home, Duplicity. Set it up once and then just let it go, and it supports a million different backup targets you can ship your backups off to, including the local filesystem. Has auto-aging/removal rules, easy restores, incrementals, etc. Encrypts by default too.

contributing to open source projects

You need to be careful with this point, because it becomes addictive.

It's 4AM and I just submitted a PR to the Liftoff app repo.

Man, the code in that project is really something else. Looks like something hacked together in a weekend

I think I'm going to fork it and make it... not that.

"No, I can't come out tonight, I'm optimizing my CONFIG.SYS file so I can have a mouse AND my Soundblaster work at the same time!"

Fantastic list, thanks.

It's true, at least for me. I can actually control the focus now instead of digging down a rabbithole of <random topic here> for 6 hours at 3am.

If I'm going down that rabbithole now, it's because I want to.

AI Trump is somehow more coherent than real Trump.

To be fair, that bar is so low you need a shovel to reach it.

That certainly makes me feel better for letting the Magic Smoke out.

You're literally describing the system that controlled employee keyscan badges a couple of jobs ago...

That thing was fun to try and tie into the user disable/termination script that I wrote. I ended up having to just manipulate its DB tables manually in the script instead of going through an API that the software exposed, because it didn't do that. Figuring out their fucked-up DB schema was an adventure on its own too.

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I still haven't found a replacement for it.

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Throw in a mysterious comment that says "Don't change anything below this line or everything breaks" and it's complete.

"We don't know why this works, but it does, don't touch it." would also be acceptable.

You're a good man, Charlie Brown.

You should see some of our VM hosts at work...

Gotcha. I understand your opinion, but they seem pretty confident about their ability to continue to deliver.

And also, never get into bed with Oracle. I quit a job once when they started seriously sniffing Oracle's panties. Oracle has hostages, not customers.

Look in to Rocky Linux. It was started by the original developer of CentOS the day Red Hat announced that CentOS would be moving upstream of RHEL. They've already put out an announcement saying that it's essentially going to be business as usual for them.

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Liftoff is great, has a lot of potential too. Devs in their Matrix room are cool.

I desperately want a RiF clone for interacting with Lemmy. If RiF does actually shut down at the end of the month, I really hope talklittle open-sources it.

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This comment made me physically recoil in disgust. Great job.

This video is the greatest thing that Yahoo Answers has ever produced.

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