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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/)CO
Posts
26
Comments
408
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I'm okay with the "human-readability," but I've never been happy with the "machine-readibility" of XML. Usually I just want to pull a few values from an API return, yet every XML library assumes I want the entire file in a data structure that I can iterate through. It's a waste of resources and a pain in the ass.

    Even though it's not the "right" way, most of the time I just use regex to grab whatever exists between an opening and closing tag. If I'm saving/loading data from my own software, I just use a serialization library.

  • This is very situational. I'm not a contractor, but I spend a significant portion of my time doing hobbies that require power tools. I don't need a drill that will last for an entire day at a jobsite. Ryobi works fine for me. On the other hand, I wish I had never spent $600 on a cheap planer; I knew I'd want a better one eventually,, and sure enough, I found a need to upgrade after a few years. Now I've spent $3600 on planers. I could have just gone with the $3k one and saved myself $600.

    If I'm going to use it once, I borrow it. If I'm going to use it every few months, I buy a cheap one. If I'm going to use it every week, then it's worth it to me to buy something I can keep for at least a decade or two.

  • I agree with you to a certain point.

    When somebody finishes high-school and becomes an adult, they should develop a useful skill that they can turn into a career. This might be going to college for STEM, it might be a trade-school, or it might be an apprenticeship as a skilled tradesman. I wouldn't discount all liberal arts degrees either; a degree in graphic design can be well worth the time.

    The important thing is that people entering the workforce can say "I'm a doctor," "I'm a plumber," "I'm an auto mechanic," "I'm a software developer," etc. Be able to say "I do something."

    Going to college for an undergraduate degree in art history? That's something you should do after you're already established in your career and you feel like you'd like to learn something more. Going to school to learn to be a chef, paint cars, build furniture, etc, they might not be STEM or law degrees, but they're useful.

    I guess in summary, kids should go to school to learn a useful skill. Adults should go to school for whatever they want.

  • It really depends on how far back you want to look.

    If the US was to suddenly stop projecting its interests internationally, then as others have mentioned, then likely the world work become somewhat more socialized. European countries would probably step up and try to keep China in check, but without the US contributing to these efforts, it would cause a significant strain on their military resources.

    If the US was to take an isolationist policy 100 years ago, then there is a good chance that WW2 would have been won by the Axis. The Allied forces likely would have put up a good fight, but I'm not sure they would have emerged victorious against the combined Axis forces. The war in the Pacific would have raged on much longer, and without nuclear weapons, there would have been an extreme loss of life invading Japan. At the very least, WW2 would have lasted much much longer than it did. Depending on the outcome, plenty of countries might currently be speaking German and debating if they should tear down 80-year-old statues of Hitler.

  • A lot of boomers are really particular about well-manicured yards, pristine gardens, etc. Squirrels do not help with this.

    I love seeing little divots where our squirrels bury nuts. If they eat some of our plants, then I put a cage around it or plant new ones. Seeing the little guys play and eat the food we put out for them far outweighs any minor landscaping problems they cause.

  • The problem isn't that Harris is being held to a higher standard. The problem is that Americans think of elections the same way they think of a sporting match. It's "my team is going to win!" not "I'm going to vote for the candidate that is best aligned with my beliefs." A huge number of the people who are voting Republican are doing so because the Republican party is their "team," and damn it, their team is going to win even if it kills them.

    Many years ago, I was discussing politics with a coworker (always a bad idea, but whatever). It went something like this:

    "So, you don't think the less-fortunate should be able to afford medical care?" "No, of course not, everyone should be able to see a doctor."

    "You don't think gay people should be allowed to marry?" "I'm not gay, but they can do whatever makes them happy."

    "You support the war in Iraq, then?" "I support our troops, but the war is kind of a waste."

    "We definitely should legalize weed, right?" "Um, I'd smoke it if I didn't get drug tested."

    "So why are you voting Republican, then?" "My family is Republican; we always do."

  • This is kind of a shit article. Most of these are just old hardware that eventually had modern improvements, not "trends."

    A "trend" is cold cathode black lights inside the case, not a silly naming scheme for CPU revisions.

  • I can't speak to the AI voice generation part of this, but you might be interested in the Domesday Duplicator for digitizing your audio, especially if some or it is slightly degraded.

    https://github.com/harrypm/DomesdayDuplicator

    The project was originally designed for laserdisc, but it's been expanded to support VHS and cassette tape. Traditionally, you would play your tape on a cassette player, then the built in analog circuitry would convert the magnetic signals into audio, amplify them, and feed them to a sound card on your PC, which then converts the analog signal to a digital audio stream.

    With the Domesdsy Duplicator, you record the raw magnetic signal from the read head and directly digitize it into a bitstream that you can then process as needed. For DIY archiving from an analog source, it's one of the best options for signal fidelity, and it will give you the truest representation of what's actually on the tape.

  • Everybody who keeps saying "just go" seems to be assuming that OP works in an office job where you can just come back and finish your work after your appointment.

    What if they're an air traffic controller, they're operating factory equipment, monitoring a nuclear reactor, etc. Some jobs require a person to be present and attentive. Now they have to talk to their manager, find someone to cover for them, etc. Mental health treatment should be easily available without having to jump through hoops. I understand their frustration.

  • I think you might be misunderstanding what I'm trying to say. I'm not discounting the value of human culture. I enjoy various types of art, and I am grateful for the people who produce it.

    What doesn't interest me in the slightest is urban "culture." By that I mean going to restaurants, attending parties, seeing live music, walking to the corner pub, etc. I haven't done any of these things in years, and I'm happy. If I discover a musician I like, I'm going to spend some money and buy their record, but I don't need to be surrounded by a crowd of people listening to them live.

    You mention the term "anti-social behavior," but that doesn't describe everyone who'd rather live in a rural area than a city. Some of us just like our peace and quiet. As far as subsidizing roads and shipping to rural areas, you like to eat, right? Where do you think the food came from? You live in a house or an apartment, right? Where did the wood, concrete, and raw materials come from? A huge amount of agriculture and production comes from rural areas, and it's always going to be necessary to have roads and infrastructure to support this. The fact that I live in the same area that supplied your food doesn't mean that your tax dollars are paying for roads solely so that I can drive on them.

    I understand that people like you enjoy the busy life of a city and that you can legitimately take advantage of what a city offers. I'm not like that. Large gatherings of people don't make me happy; they just make me want to leave. My original argument was that a lot of people live in cities because they have to for work. Some of them, like you, live in cities because it makes them happy. For the people that live in urban areas because they have to, I was speculating that many of them might move to more rural areas given the option. I'm not trying to shit on your lifestyle (although I do have strong negative opinions about bicycles on roadways), and I would hope that you extend the same courtesy. Life is short, and in a perfect world, everyone could live in a place that they enjoy.

  • I feel the same as you, but you really can't deny the fact that the engineers at his various companies have managed to design some really great tech despite their CEO.

    Not just spacecraft either. Starlink is really the first usable satellite broadband, and Tesla has mastered the art of putting advanced powertrain in terrible automobiles.

  • If you feel that way, then you probably should live in a city. Some people prefer city life; there's nothing wrong with that, but it's not for everyone. I have no desire to be around other people, and the "cultural" aspect of urban living holds no interest to me. I get enough human interaction through work. At home, I want to be un-bothered by other people and go about my business in solitude.

  • I'm interested to see if this rural/urban divide is going to shift in the future. With the ballooning cost of real estate and the rise of remote work, a lot of urban liberals are moving to more rural areas.

    There's certainly a group of people that enjoy city life, but a lot of people (myself included) just want some peace and quiet and only lived in or near cities to be close to work.

  • I think I'm misunderstanding how LDAP works. It's probably obvious, but I've never used it.

    If my switch is expecting a username and password for login, how does it go from expecting a web login to "the LDAP server recognizes this person, and they have permissions to access network devices, so I'll let them in."?

    Also, to be clear, I'm referring to the process of logging in and configuring the switch itself, not L2 switching or L3 routing.

  • Like several people here, I've also been interested in setting up an SSO solution for my home network, but I'm struggling to understand how it would actually work.

    Lets say I set up an LDAP server. I log into my PC, and now my PC "knows" my identity from the LDAP server. Then I navigate to the web UI for one of my network switches. How does SSO work in this case? The way I see it, there are two possible solutions.

    • The switch has some built-in authentication mechanism that can authenticate with the LDAP server or something like Keycloak. I don't see how this would work as it relies upon every single device on the network supporting a particular authentication mechanism.
    • I log into and authenticate with an HTTP forwarding server that then supplies the username/password to the switch. This seems clunky but could be reasonably secure as long as the username/password is sufficiently complex.

    I generally understand how SSO works within a curated ecosystem like a Windows-based corporate network that uses primarily Microsoft software for everything. I have various Linux systems, Windows, a bunch of random software that needs authentication, and probably 10 different brands of networking equipment. What's the solution here?

  • To be clear, for those of us in the USA who don't live in backwards-ass states, it's basically the same as you describe. When I got my drivers license, I ticked a box that said I wanted to register to vote. I've never had a problem since then.

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  • Not going to comment on a), but b) kind of makes sense to me. Her campaign feels very much like Obama's. You have a candidate who is energetic, likeable, and generally seems like a decent person. You have someone who people want to vote for instead of just voting against the other guy. It makes sense they would try to draw parallels.

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  • Personally, I'd be happy with a web browser that doesn't make me jump through hoops to access a HTTPS site with certificate errors on a local IP address.

    I don't care if 192.168.1.1 is using a self-signed certificate. I just want to configure my fucking router.