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2 yr. ago

  • Next trend? Sexy pictures of Neelix.

  • You're speaking to an ex-alcoholic ^^ used to use it a social crutch, because I never really felt well in social situations. It became so bad that all my money went into bar hopping, and you're definitely right: it was to "treat my anxiety".

    Anxiety really is one of the greatest issues of our times, isn't it?

  • It was my attempt at writing a sub position from a place of a child, hopefully making the reader aware that "hey wait a minute... there might be kids on this platform?!?!

    But I will admit, I did feel a little bit of deevolved when I called the entire comment section mommy.

    It's 6th grade all over again.

  • Brodie is a great "summarizer". Its nice to keep tabs on the goings on between the development and developers of various desktop projects and backend developers.

  • Hamas is a bunch of oligarchs that want more Palestinian blood because it gives them more financial support from despots, that they sit on like Smaug. They dgaf about Palestinians.

  • Well, not only. I'd like to thank the US, Great Britain and France, a.k.a the Larry, Curly and Moe of geopolitics. A bunch of dumbasses who should have had their powers checked a long time ago.

  • It's good then that we have choice of schedulers :)

  • Can't say I have. Haven't used hibernation mode for years even. Sleep mode is just too good nowadays for me to use it, so I guess we could chalk that up to a fault of the setup.

    According to ReadTheDocs (BTRFS, swapfile) it's possible under certain circumstances, but requires the 6.1 kernel to do it in a relatively easy way.

  • Pretty much large suathes of banking and financing companies, as well as other massive industries, which btw are hiring and pay well.

    Java (or rather JVM) is slow at first, but once a JVM has "booted" Java performance wise is on par with the performance of other languages, even system languages. This isn't too apparent in the open source world, because Oracle.

    Most infrastructure running on Java have been doing so for decades and continues to be implemented, not because the project managers are idiots, but because the software is portable and java (believe it or not) is getting better, similar to how JS has gotten better post-TypeScript.

    So let's not throw the language and infrastructure on the fire in a time when we know *technical debt" is just an executive excuse to allow rushed, faulty and unoptimized programming in order to meet insane deadlines by white collar deadites.

    "Agile", "crunch", "technical debt". We've been taken for absolute fools, and now we're blaming the tools. Smh.

  • If anyone would lock their OS down like that, it would be Canonical.

  • Well technically, if you're using BTRFS, you might want to check out subvolumes. Here's my subvolume setup:

    • Subvolume 1, named @ (root subvol)
    • Subvolume 2, named @home (/home subvol)
    • Subvolume 3, named @srv (/srv subvol)
    • Subvolume 4, named @opt (/opt subvol)
    • Subvolume 5, named @swap (which is - you guessed it - the swap subvol)

    You then set up fstab to reflect each of the subvolumes, using the subvol= option. Here's the kicker: they are all in one partition. Yes, even the swap. Though caveat, swap still has to be a swapfile, but in its own separate subvolume. Don't ask me why, it's just the way to do it.

    The great thing about subvolumes is that it doesn't do any size provisioning, unless specified by the user. All subvolumes share the space available within the partition. This means you won't have to do any soul searching when setting up the partitions regarding use of space.

    This also means that if I want to nuke and pave, I only need run a BTRFS command on my @ subvolume (which contains /usr, /share, /bin), because it won't be touching the contents of @home, @srv, or @opt. What's extra cool here is that I'll lose 0% FS metadata or permission setup, since you're technically just disassociating some blocks from a subvolume. You're not really "formatting"... which is neat as hell.

    The only extra partitions I have is the EFI partition and an EXT4 partition for the /boot folder since I use LUKS2.

  • I don't think that's Vodafone directly. Vodafone is a mobile provider and is therefore also an ISP.

    Someone who uses Vodafone tried to log in, wether it was manual or automated. At least that's my surmise.

    This is a good time to remind people to use 2FA and possibly even WebAuth (or WebKey) if possible.

  • Well yes, it can, but it requires power. Vast amounts of energy. It's still about the energy, even in the distant future, because I swear to the prophets, it never ends. It just doesn't stop not stopping.

  • No, but now I'm envisioning some thesbian sauntering into your living room, fainting towards your USB port and giving a heartfelt soliloquy as the USB drive he just pushed in starts a hidden automated install.

    Oh woe is you.

  • Some families are.

  • "Contrived" is a better word I guess. I don't feel like many of the arcs have been fleshed out, leading to conclusions that are ill deserved Burnham as a character arc is a perfect example of this. I think she gets everything served to her on a silver platter, that the action setpieces are not enough to justify the order of things. This might be an issue with cutting for time, but still.

  • Easy because the combined shine from our skulls would manifest into a cataclysm causing deathray. If you see two bald people fighting, throw a wig on one of them to save the world.