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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/)UW
Posts
41
Comments
748
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Thanks for the hint. I followed and checked: safe

     
        
    $ efi-readvar -v PK
    Variable PK, length 983
    PK: List 0, type X509
        Signature 0, size 955, owner 3cc24e96-22c7-41d8-8863-8e39dcxxxxxx
            Subject:
                C=JP, ST=Kanagawa, L=Yokohama, O=Lenovo Ltd., CN=Lenovo Ltd. PK CA 2012
            Issuer:
                C=JP, ST=Kanagawa, L=Yokohama, O=Lenovo Ltd., CN=Lenovo Ltd. PK CA 2012
    
      
  • Tried. They only release it for Windows, or a bootable ISO, which I can't see what files are in there. I also tried getting the firmware from LVFS but I'm not sure if I done it right as non of them start with "EFI " header (which I assume that's the file I should be looking at).

  • The main avenue of kids accessing the internet is via their smartphone. I'm not too knowledged into the functionality and capabilities of the built in parental by Google and Apple. Can anybody chime in and explain?

    It will be nice to have somekind of MDM solutions, ideally free with a nice guided setup, for parents managing kid's phone.

  • Easiest solution: point the fucking DNS to a family safe one and lock it behind passcode. Done.

    This is how you "protect the children." Not by making a burden on everyone else. I don't need age verification on the internet, ever.

  • IMO LLMs are ok to get a head start of searching. Like got a vague idea of something but don't know the exact keywords. LLMs can help and use the output on whatever search engine you like. This saves a lots of time tinkering the right keywords.

  • I had a read about the WHQL (which I assumes what certified means). It uses the Windows HLK to perform a series of tests, which submited to Microsoft, and only then the driver will be signed.

    While certification isn't endorsement, the testing and the resulting certification implies basic compatibility and reliability. And causing bootloops and BSODs is anywhere but close to "basic compatibility and reliability."

  • No, OP absolutely still need staggered rollout. Immutable distros are a blue-green deployment self-contained. Yet, all the instance can upgrade and switch all at once and break all of them. OP still need some rollout strategy externally to prevent the whole service being brought down.