

And a switch costs, MSRP, ~300€/$. So they just got 45,000,000,000, 45 billion dollars. Or, in other words: They could raise the MSRP by 6$. Which would be justified for a then better product.
Also, Hall effect fixes all problems, since decades. Why weren’t they used widely? Because that would cost poor little Nintendo/M$/Sony a few cents more. So they sure as hell won’t implement that new thing.
But remember, on a third device. Not the one where your KeePass DB is one fingerprint away, and your private SSH key too.
Tbh, I myself still have SSH on port 22. Firstly, because I’m lazy, and secondly … yeah that’s it. I’m honestly just lazy. But spam bots trying office/cookie123 are not a real threat, and anyone trying to actually target me will either have somehow acquired my key + password, use one of the probably many security issues that exist in the dozen services I selfhost, social engineer me into doing something (not saying I’ve given out my (old) KeePass password once, but it could be, as love makes blind (I still love her)), or just smash my kneecaps until I give out everything.
Move SSH to non-standard port, make endlessh use the default port. Only use SSH keys. Only allow correct users (so eg. your user and git/forgejo). Use fail2ban to aggressively ban (redirect to default port, so 22) and report to abuseipdb everything that fails to authenticate first try (wrong user, password instead of key), has non-compatible ciphers (generally, only allow TLS1.3 etc.), or fails in any other way. Just be sure that if you accidentally get banned yourself (eg. Ctrl+C-ing during authentication), you can use another IP (eg. force v4) for connecting.
I’d say that yay encourages checking the PKGBUILD or its diff more than the average “curl xy | sudo sh” instruction, but considering most people see yay just as yet another package manager, instead of an AUR helper, that’s probably true for most people
Except it automates the steps you’d have to take to inspect and edit the script, if needed. Also, PKGBUILDs are much nicer to read than just plain install scripts. And, of course, it actually builds a package, which is then installed, so it’s not only tracked but can be updated like the rest of the system.
yay <package name>
There is a 99% chance it’s in there, and there is an 80% chance it uses the latest version/git HEAD
Not every trans woman tho
I do that every time I have to use windows. But I think my boss does not like that…
I’d guess that, like all tech that’s highly locked down, it will be very hard to do anything with - like Apple devices.
So the only thing to do right now is - not updating.
Ollama is simple too, I meant that containers make everything a nightmare to maintain.
If you want something intuitive, use Paint or pen and paper.
Really easy to start running it
Then everything goes wrong, from configuration over logs to cuda. And the worst fucking debugging ever.
Why not throw that into a VM with VFIO passthrough, plug the GPU in via an external dock and if we are already at abstracting shit away for unnecessary complexity and non-compatibility do all that on windows?
ext is just so simple yet beauti- and useful
Never have seen any .exe that logs anything. They’re literally black boxes.
This version of ‘false’ is implemented as a C program, and is thus more secure and faster than a shell script implementation
I bet there is a way to exploit
int main(int, char**) {
return 1;
}
Endlich jemand der auch so viel swap wie ram hat.