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Posts
7
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205
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I'm so glad I'm on my own instance.

  • Yes. If you don't connect it is pretty dumb and shouldn't be able to send your data for harvesting. You sould research if you can set it to one of the outputs permanently then you can use some external device that you trust.

  • Yes you can. There is revenue splitting for the ads between shorts.

  • Since this is not possible yet any UI would be better than none. You could iterate upon that.

  • The OLED has a nicer screen. Apart from that they are all pretty much the same performance wise. The expansion via SD card works very well. You can swap the internal ssd but it's not recommended. I'd buy it directly from valve if you don't want to buy used. Their support is quite good.

  • There is a whole field, that looks a bit like religion to me, about how to test right.

    I can tell you from experience that testing is a tool that can give confidence. There are a few new tools that can help. Mutation testing is one I know that can find bad tests.

    Integration tests can help find the most egregious errors that make your application crash.

    Not every getter needs a test but using unit tests while developing a feature can even save time because you don't have to start the app and get to the point where the change happens and test by hand.

    A review can find some errors but human brains are not compilers it is hard to miss errors and the more you add to a review the easier it can get lost. The reviews can mostly help make sure that the code is more in line with the times style and that more than one person knows about the changes.

    You can't find all mistakes all the time. That's why it is very important to have a strategy to avert the worse and revert errors. If you develop a web app: backups, rolling deployments, revert procedures. And make sure everyone know how and try it at least once. These procedures can fail. Refine them trough failure.

    That is my experience from working in the field for a while. No tests is bad. Too many tests is a hassle. There will always be errors. Be prepared.

  • An adequate test coverage should help you with these kinds of errors. Your tests should at least somehow fail if you make something incompatible. Also using the tools of your IDE will help you with refactoring.

  • It's a fork of kbin. I don't see any moral and ethical difference between the software lemmy or the software mbin. Both seem to offer an unfiltered access to the fediverse.

  • It was fun for two playthroughs but that's it. It is very limited.

  • If you only want specific stuff, why don't you just subscribe to what you like? Your opinion is not unpopular, just wrong. It wouldn't be better. It would be better for you. That's an important distinction. Lots of people enjoy it as it is.

  • Windows Defender is the default anti virus solution on Windows by now and it is good. But no anti virus is perfect. It is a good idea to have a backup strategy if you plan on having any important data on your PC. In case of encryption malware and hardware problems.

    Phishing is also very problematic practice that the anti virus can't protect you from and even experts can fall into the traps. So you have to be careful with your account credentials.

    Don't disable Windows updates or postpone them indefinitely (though windows makes that harder to do anyways). Also be aware that your PC might need firmware updates too to stay secure. It depends on the manufacturer of your hardware how and if these are provided and how you install them.

    Lastly I can recommend using Firefox with uBlock Origin. Using an ad blocker can help you stay safer and Firefox has very good support for them.

  • Godmode: you maintain the fork.

  • Your phone is rawdogging all it's connections. It can receive SMS and Phone calls without your intervention. There have been several zero-click bugs in the past that allowed injecting malicious code into your phone without any interaction.

  • There have been a few bugs in the past years that let you take over a phone without user interaction. There was one where you only need to receive an SMS (it was invisible even) and your phone is infected. Another one was a vulnerability in wifi calling and voice over lte.

    A phone is not a passive device that only gets something when you request it. You take also it with you to public places, use it in open wifi networks and you get calls. All that while being used for security critical stuff like 2FA, banking and payment.

    You shouldn't use a phone without current security updates for much more than calling. It is a time bomb. If you want to educate yourself further you should look at "zero click vulnerabilities".

  • Sometimes. It depends on the manufacturer. Some do more some don't promise anything. You have to know what you have. Also the support time starts usually at the start of sale not at the time of purchase. That means if you buy a new phone that was released a year ago on clearance or something you might have only half the time.

  • Yes and no. For apple you can use their phones for quite a long time securely. For Android that is a very different story. As far as I know only Google with their new pixel phones and Samsung have offered more than 2 years of updates. After that time your phone becomes a security risk. So make sure your devices receives updates or can be used with a custom ROM (though that can be insecure as well).

  • Tofu

    Jump
  • Cold silken tofu with chili oil is a great treat for hot summer days.