nostupidquestions No Stupid Questions Why I Haven't Seen Any Trump Supporters In Fediverse (Lemmy and Mastodon)?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 3 weeks ago 100%

    I think the hard-right people have mostly self-exiled to their own echo chambers like truth.social and other places that are Donald-used-and-approved. I think he's also active on Twitter again now that Musk has destroyed all content moderation on the platform. They follow their great leader and unless and until he starts posting his demagoguery on Lemmy they have no interest and no reason to come here.

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  • nostupidquestions No Stupid Questions Desalination in a freezer?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 3 weeks ago 100%

    It's not difficult it's just expensive and energy intensive, and frankly boiling water is both cheaper and easier and we've had lots of experience doing it in massive quantities since the steam age and it works great and gives off steam or hot water which can be used for lots more stuff like heating and even power generation. Ice is almost useless in comparison.

    As for why you can't freeze salt into ice, they don't mix. It's like trying to mix oil and water. Technically, if you get the ice really really cold and mash it up with some equally cold salt you could make some kind of mixture of ice and salt and maybe even compress it together until it forms a solid mass again, but it's not saltwater ice, it's just salt and ice mixed together like oil and water. They may appear mixed, but they don't mix, they don't dissolve into each other. Ice's crystal structure does not have anywhere for the salt to go and the salt's crystal structure doesn't have anywhere for the ice to go they're not compatible in any way.

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  • canada Canada Mom comes to pick up driver accused of stunt driving on Hwy. 417 in Ottawa
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 1 month ago 100%

    On the first offense, depending on circumstances. On the second offense, without exception.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted What self hosting feels like (It's painful, please help 🥲)
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 2 months ago 100%

    Matrix and its implementations like Synapse have a very intimidating architecture (I'd go as far as to call most of the implementations somewhat overengineered) and the documentation ranges from inconsistent to horrific. I ran into this particular situation myself, Fortunately this particular step you're overthinking it. You can use any random string you want. It doesn't even have to be random, just as long as what you put in the config file matches. It's basically just a temporary admin password.

    Matrix was by far the worst thing I've ever tried to self-host. It's a hot mess. Good luck, I think you're close to the finish line.

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  • nostupidquestions No Stupid Questions What is the secret to making LED light bulbs last as long as the package says?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 2 months ago 90%

    Most cheap non-dimmable LEDs have drivers that use resistors to determine the current to drive through the LEDs. As a rule, these are always set too high to overdrive the LEDs (sometimes as much as twice their rated current) for marginal brightness gains and to burn out the bulb prematurely. I'm obviously unable to actually see directly into the operation of the great minds that design LED lightbulbs but logic leaves me with only those two plausible conclusions, I'll let you decide which motivation you think is a bigger factor for most manufacturers.

    Conveniently, most manufacturers carefully fine-tune this value to prematurely destroy the LEDs at just the right time, which requires careful balancing of resistors, and even MORE conveniently (for us) the cheapest way for them to do this is typically to use two resistors. And MOST conveniently (for us), if you were to carelessly break one of the pair of resistors they use, and leave the other one intact, the current would immediately drop to a very reasonable and appropriate level, generating much less heat, drawing much less power, making LED death extremely unlikely, and only modestly reducing brightness in many cases, because LEDs have non-linear brightness and the heavily overdriven ones are typically FAR beyond the point of diminishing returns. In some cases the reduction in power results in basically no visible difference in light output. In some cases it can be argued they're literally stealing extra power from your electricity bill and using it as an electric heater for no purpose other than to burn out your own light bulbs prematurely so you have to replace them.

    The good news is, like I said, removing one of the responsible resistors instantly solves the design flaw and is usually quite easy even without any special tools or electronics knowledge. BigCliveDotCom calls this "Doobying" the bulbs after the Dubai bulbs that were mentioned in other comments. If you watch some of his videos about LED bulbs you should be able to see the pattern of which resistors to remove, if they are on the board they will basically always be right next to each other and relatively small values (typically in the 20 ohms to 200 ohms range). The only modification I make to his procedure is that I prefer to remove the HIGHER value of the two resistors instead of the lower one, which results in perhaps somewhat less lifetime preservation (still much more than the original setting) and less power savings, but more brightness, and is usually adequately good for my purposes. I also use sturdy tweezers to remove the resistor instead of a screwdriver which seems to me that it would have a higher risk of collateral damage.

    Is it a lot of work for a single light bulb? Kind of, yes. But once you get it done a bunch of times, you'll probably rarely have to do it again, as these bulbs last almost forever. In fact, I have yet to have one actually fail, I am mostly just replacing the occasional old unmodified LED bulb from time to time.

    This will not work with dimmable bulbs or certain fancy high end bulbs. Also some are much, much easier to modify than others. Clive calls the ones that are relatively easy "hackable" and it's really a crapshoot to find them. Some have covers/bulbs/diffusers that are nearly impossible to remove without catastrophic damage to the bulb and/or your hands. Others simply use a different circuit design that doesn't have resistors. Some only have a single resistor, meaning to change the value you need to solder a new one in its place. In my experience, the bargain-basement, junkiest, least reliable bulbs tend to be the easiest to hack this way and often skimp on things like "gluing the lens on" so it's easy to get off. But you'll have to experiment to find a brand and style that works well for this.

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  • nostupidquestions No Stupid Questions Is there a chat/dating app that isn't complete shit and pay wall restricted?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 3 months ago 100%

    So it's not really FOSS at all, it's just a loss-leader to draw you into the network, trap your data, and then enshittify and monetize as per standard practice.

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  • stable_diffusion Stable Diffusion AiTracker.art: A Torrent Tracker For AI Models
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 3 months ago 100%

    I tried to download one and it accused me of being a bot and looped me through a capcha twice in a row and I gave up. *shrug* Otherwise seems like a good idea. Good luck.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Ingenious ways to measure power draw
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 6 months ago 100%

    While it sounds a bit hacky, I think this is an underrated solution. It's actually quite a clever way to bypass the whole problem. Physics is your enemy here, not economics.

    This is kind of like trying to find an electric motor with the highest efficiency and torque at 1 RPM. While it's not theoretically impossible, it's not just a matter of price or design, it's a matter of asking the equipment to do something it's simply not good at, while you want to do it really well. It can't, certainly not affordably or without significant compromises in other areas. In the case of a motor, you'd be better off letting the motor spin at its much higher optimal RPM and gear it down, even though there will be a little loss in the geartrain it's still a much better solution overall and that's why essentially every low speed motor is designed this way.

    In the case of an ammeter, it seems totally reasonable to bring it up to a more ideal operating range by adding a constant artificial load. In fact the high precision/low range multimeters and oscilloscopes are usually internally doing almost exactly the same thing with their probes, just in a somewhat more complex way behind the scenes.

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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 6 months ago 33%

    The end result is exactly the same.

    The difference is that you can install an iso on a computer without an internet connection. The normal iso contains copies of most or all relevant packages. Although maybe not all of the latest and most up to date ones, the bulk are enough to get you started. The net install, like the name suggests, requires an internet connection to download packages for anything except the most minimal, bare-bones configuration. The connection would hopefully be nearly as fast if not faster than the iso and be guaranteed to have the latest updates available which the iso may not. While such a fast connection is usually taken for granted nowadays, it is not always available in some situations and locations, it is not always convenient, and some hardware may have difficulty with the network stack that may be difficult to resolve before a full system is installed or may require specialized tools to configure or diagnose that are only available as packages.

    In almost all cases, the netinst works great and is a more efficient and sensible way to install. However, if it doesn't work well in your particular situation, the iso will be more reliable, with some downsides and redundancy that wastes disk space and time.

    Things like windows updates and some large and complex software programs and systems often come with similar "web" and "offline" installers that make the same distinctions for the same reasons. The tradeoff is the same, as both options have valid use cases.

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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 6 months ago 100%

    To be fair, in the case of something like a Linux ISO, you are only a tiny fraction of the target or you may not even need to be the target at all to become collateral damage. You only need to be worth $1 to the attacker if there's 99,999 other people downloading it too, or if there's one other guy who is worth $99,999 and you don't need to be worth anything if the guy/organization they're targeting is worth $10 million. Obviously there are other challenges that would be involved in attacking the torrent swarm like the fact that you're not likely to have a sole seeder with corrupted checksums, and a naive implementation will almost certainly end up with a corrupted file instead of a working attack, but to someone with the resources and motivation to plan something like this it could get dangerous pretty quickly.

    Supply chain attacks are increasingly becoming a serious risk, and we do need to start looking at upgrading security on things like the checksums we're using to harden them against attackers, who are realizing that this can be a very effective and relatively cheap way to widely distribute malware.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted How responsive is your Nextcloud?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 7 months ago 100%

    I still use Nextcloud for syncing documents and other basic stuff that is relatively simple. But I started getting glacial sync times consuming large amounts of CPU and running into lots of conflicts as more and more got added. For higher performance, more demanding sync tasks involving huge numbers of files, large file sizes, and rapid changes, I've started using Syncthing and am much, much happier with it. Nextcloud sync seems to be sort of a jack of all trades, master of none, kind of thing. Whereas Syncthing is a one trick pony that does that trick very, very well.

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  • pcmasterrace PC Master Race Why does BIOS suck?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 7 months ago 100%

    The setting you described sounds like a motherboard manufacturer issue. There's no reason for it not to default to "auto" unless that somehow limits something else they wanted to have on by default. They choose the defaults, and they chose that one, even if it's stupid. Either that, or you set it somehow previously and didn't realize or forgot you did.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Self hosted NAS + Lightweight Game Streaming Solution?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 7 months ago 100%

    I feel like you are the one who is confusing a "NAS device" or "NAS appliance" as in a device that is specifically designed and primarily intended to provide NAS services (ie, its main attribute is large disks, with little design weight given to processing, RAM or other components except to the extent needed to provide NAS service), and a NAS service itself, which can be provided by any generic device simultaneously capable of both storage and networking, although often quite poorly.

    You are asserting the term "NAS" in this thread refers exclusively to the former device/appliance, everyone else is assuming the latter. In fact, both are correct and context suggests the latter, although I'm sure given your behavior in this thread you will promptly reply that only your interpretation is correct and everyone else is wrong. If you want to assert that, go right ahead and make yourself look foolish.

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  • reddit Reddit How does one bulk-replace all of their Reddit writings with pro-lemmy propaganda ?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 7 months ago 100%

    Joke's on Reddit, I've always been posting unhinged misinformation.

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  • linux Linux GIMP - GIMP 2.99.18 Released: The Last Development Preview Before 3.0!
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 7 months ago 100%

    I really like what they're doing to GIMP lately and I am looking forward to 3.0!

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  • askscience Ask Science Utility of Arc Furnace Versus Other Heat Sources
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 7 months ago 100%

    Yes, you could probably use a laser furnace if it was cost-effective at those power levels. But it's not even close. Arcs are and very practical in almost every sense and ridiculously cheap besides the power they consume. And a laser would consume more.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Tunnelling a port from a separate computer
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 7 months ago 100%

    You can also automate this with autossh which is designed for exactly this kind of persistent tunnel. Although a simple "while" loop might seem like the intuitive way to keep it running, autossh is very reliable and takes care of all the corner cases for you.

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  • 3dprinting 3DPrinting BambuLab recall: Should you replace the cable yourself? ft. EN 50678
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 8 months ago 100%

    DC adds an extra layer of isolation if something goes wrong, and an extra place for it to fail safely in a nicely enclosed metal box. It takes a really catastrophic failure for a 28A DC power supply to go much beyond 28A for very long. A mains supply can do it all day long unless there's some other form of protection like a fuse or isolation transformer.

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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 8 months ago 99%

    It is mostly a myth (and scare tactic invented by copyright trolls and encouraged by overzealous virus scanners) that pirated games are always riddled with viruses. They certainly can be, if you download them from untrustworthy sources, but if you're familiar with the actual piracy scene, you have to understand that trust is and always will be a huge part of it, ways to build trust are built into the community, that's why trust and reputation are valued higher than even the software itself. Those names embedded into the torrent names, the people and the release groups they come from, the sources where they're distributed, have meaning to the community, and this is why. Nobody's going to blow 20 years of reputation to try to sneak a virus into their keygen. All the virus scans that say "Virus detected! ALARM! ALARM!" on every keygen you download? If you look at the actual detection information about what it actually detected, and you dig deep enough through their obfuscated scary-severity-risks-wall-of-text, you'll find that in almost all cases, it's actually just a generic, non-specific detection of "tools associated with piracy or hacking" or something along those lines. They all have their own ways of spinning it, but in every case it's literally detecting the fact that it's a keygen, and saying "that's scary! you won't want pirated illegal software on your computer right?! Don't worry, I, your noble antivirus program will helpfully delete it for you!"

    It's not as scary as you think, they just want you to think it is, because it helps drive people back to paying for their software. It's classic FUD tactics and they're all part of it. Antivirus companies are part of the same racket, they want you paying for their software too.

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  • nostupidquestions No Stupid Questions How Can I Remove the Gunk from These Luggage Wheels?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 8 months ago 100%

    Keep the gray plastic. Remove black clip around the vertical wheel post in the gray plastic. Remove wheel and wheel post. Buy new wheel. Installl new wheel. It will be easier to find a new wheel once you have the old wheel out so you can take measurements. but it's likely something pretty standard, off-the-shelf. Wheels are something that companies buy, they rarely build them themselves. They typically come as a castoring assembly with wheel, axle, spindle, and attachment post in a variety of common sizes and with a dizzying variety of actual wheels.

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  • worldnews World News Russia recognizes death of IL-22 commander
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 8 months ago 100%

    Clearly Russia has no idea how to censor different things in different ways to create a specific narrative for people to buy into. They've never done anything like that before, they aren't masters of the craft of disinformation or anything.

    Totally unrelated joke, how do you know if a Russian is lying? You don't, sometimes he could be telling the truth just to trick you.

    And I'll throw in one of my favourite exchanges between two characters:

    "Of all the stories you told me, which ones were true and which ones weren't?" "My dear Doctor, they're all true." "Even the lies?" "Especially the lies."

    Trusting something coming out of Russia to be true is foolish, just as foolish is trusting it to be false. Nothing that say is reliable in the slightest or should be used to make any useful conclusion about the real world.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Pi-Hole or something else for network ad blocking?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 8 months ago 100%

    That's what LCARS means, it's the name of the computer console in Star Trek. In the show, it stands for "Library Computer Access and Retrieval System" although it's often used for stuff other than the library computer too.

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  • nostupidquestions No Stupid Questions Why is the current temperature sometimes lower than today's low temperature? For example right now it 13F with a predicated low today of 16F!
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 8 months ago 100%

    a) Forecasts are very resource-intensive, they are performed on a specific schedule using a computational forecast model. Updating the predictions would require inputting new data and running the model again, and by the time they do that, the next forecast will already be out.

    b) Do they know it's wrong? Where did you get the temperature? From an official weather station? If not, there is no reason to imagine that someone is noticing that this one particular model run was wrong in one particular spot across the whole country and trying to fix it in real time.

    c) If you did get the current temperature from an official weather station, that IS your update for it. Real time data from official weather stations is always going to trump the forecast model. What would be the point of updating the forecast when the current measured data from the weather station is now available? That's like driving down the highway and saying "I was predicting my speed would be close to 65mph, but due to the heavy traffic I'm seeing today, I'm going to re-estimate my speed to be 45mph" when you have a perfectly accurate speedometer right in front of you telling you exactly what speed you are going at all times. Forecasts are only useful for the future, and they can be wrong.

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  • piracy Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ Meta Admits Use of 'Pirated' Book Dataset to Train AI
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 8 months ago 89%

    Almost like the context matters and the world isn't entirely made up of black and white binary choices because we're not robots or computers and discrete logic does not apply to human moral arguments.

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  • technology Technology Where have all the websites gone?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 8 months ago 100%

    It is. The web was eventually corporatized and the corporations sucked all the air out of the room suffocating anything too small to compete. The fediverse is, if not taking it back, at least opening a space for those who don't want to consume from a fully corporatized web. These include many of the people who used to make "websites" instead of "apps" or "platforms". When people complain that it doesn't have as much content as say, Reddit, I look at that as a benefit, it's helping solve the (massive) discovery problem by self-curating thoughtful people who can curate content intelligently and provide real opinions and meaningful thoughts. The signal to noise ratio is much higher, and it's refreshing.

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  • worldnews World News Russia Regains Upper Hand in Ukraine’s East as Kyiv’s Troops Flag
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 8 months ago 41%

    It's the difference between your friend making you a cup of tea, and Putin making you a cup of tea.

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  • nostupidquestions No Stupid Questions Why is installing a different OS/Custom Rom on phones a huge hassle?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 9 months ago 100%

    They're only lying as long as people can continue to over and over find their way around the obstacles they place in the way, and it gets harder all the time. They have more money and more resources and more organization than the hackers trying to defeat them, they're winning the war of attrition. We may be able to make small breakthroughs here and there, but overall we continue to lose more and more territory, because the amount of effort is disproportionate to the goals. Most of what's left of the custom ROM community has given up on the losing battle with manufacturers and providers and changed focus to the various freephones but even they have their own troubles and are fragmented and short-lived. Between carriers, manufacturers, and content providers the whole mobile ecosystem is designed to be impenetrable. It is intentionally a fortress full of deadly traps and open source supporters have no hope to breach it anytime soon.

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  • technology Technology A 2 way micro USB connector. Never thought they existed
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 9 months ago 100%

    Magsafe is a really great idea, it's just a shame Apple came up with it first and I can't wait for it to be the universal standard for all types of external connectors forevermore. It's as close as we can get to wireless without being wireless.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Do any of you have that one service that just breaks constantly? I'd love to love Nextcloud, but it sure makes that difficult at times
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 9 months ago 100%

    Never had a single functional problem with Nextcloud, other than the fact that it's oppressively slow with the amount of files I've shoved into it. Mind you I also don't use MySQL/MariaDB which I consider a garbage-tier DB. Despite Postgres not being the "Recommended DB" for Nextcloud it works perfectly for me. Maybe that's the difference.

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  • pcgaming PC Gaming Kerbal Space Program 2 update For Science arrives on December 19, adding progression and a tech tree to the space simulation sequel.
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 9 months ago 100%

    Kerbal Space Program getting bought by Take-Two Interactive was sad. Knew they would run it into the ground eventually, but still a bit surprised at how quickly they've managed it.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted How should I secure my data on Nextcloud against physical attackers?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 10 months ago 100%

    Nah, I wanted to love NixOS, and granted it seems like a perfect fit for my recommendation, but a bunch of things about it rub me the wrong way. It's just not for me. I've always been most comfortable with Debian and that's what my setup script is designed for. Lots of apt.

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  • worldnews World News South Koreans want their own nukes. That could roil one of the world’s most dangerous regions
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 10 months ago 80%

    Nuclear weapons in the current era of mutually assured destruction are strictly a deterrent, only useful in a hypothetical retaliatory strike but not as a realistic offensive weapon. The hypothetical situation where this would hypothetically be used would be after Seoul has fallen to the enemy and defeat is inevitable. By having such an ability, this makes it very unattractive for any enemy to try to conquer and fortify Seoul or put any existential pressure on South Korea by any means, since doing so enables the use of a retaliatory nuclear strike, since in such a hypothetical situation there is no chance of regaining Seoul left for South Korea to worry about. Therefore, as a consequence, Seoul is protected in a very material sense by a weapon that will never have to be used in any actual strike ever.

    They may only be a deterrent but they continue to be an extremely convincing and effective one.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted How should I secure my data on Nextcloud against physical attackers?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 10 months ago 100%

    I would need to factory reset the whole server for that, which would be … highly inconvenient for me. It took me quite a long time to get everything working, and I don’t wanna loose my configuration.

    This is your actual problem you need to solve. Reinstalling your server should be as convenient as installing a basic OS and running a configuration script. It needs to be reproducible and documented, not some mystery black box of subtle configurations you've forgotten about ages ago. A nice, idempotent configuration script is both convenient and a self-documenting system for tracking all the changes you've ever implemented on your server.

    Once you can do that, adding whatever encryption you want is just a matter of finding the right sequence of commands, testing it (in another docker perhaps) and then running your configuration script to migrate your server into the desired state.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Remote Desktop solution that works without a monitor on host PC (Windows)
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 10 months ago 100%

    $400 is pretty steep. That is probably more than a lot of the computers this would be plugged into.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted What are your must-have selfhosted services?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 10 months ago 100%

    I can't live without my Nextcloud + Email server. Having all my personal files, contacts, email, calendar, and other personal information immediately accessible synced and backed up with a single app on any device or platform I want to use, is a dream come true, and I get to do it without any Big Tech, avoiding their lock-in and privacy invasion and without any fees or limits beyond my own hardware.

    OpenVPN is how I can access it from anywhere in the world, so that gets an honorable mention too.

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  • canada Canada Tips for someone who's about to move to Canada
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 10 months ago 100%

    It's tough, but I hope you can make it work, because we love having you here!

    Big cities are where the good jobs are, but they're also where all the people are, and not nearly enough housing or land area for all of them, so it basically quickly turns into an unaffordable nightmare unless you have generational wealth/inherited property, which of course you won't. Unfortunately it seems this is largely where the default "Canadian immigrant experience" will put you, and it's really not working for anyone as far as I can tell.

    I'd argue that you will do better to find yourself a small town to move to that's more remote. Not necessarily somewhere far north or completely outside civilization (although there are many such places in Canada, and in many cases Canadian government will actually give you extra money if you live in these areas as they can be both extremely remote, extreme weather, and extreme cost of basic necessities) But you can find many small less urbanized areas throughout the country, some are farming communities, some are industry towns (lumber, pulp and paper mills, mining, etc) some are better connected and serviced than others, but generally speaking the further away you get from the major cities and capitals, the cheaper housing will be. Other stuff gets more expensive though, but housing is such a dominant cost of living problem right now that it's still the main factor you'll benefit from trying to minimize. Anywhere outside the major cities, jobs will probably suck, but there will be some jobs. They won't be jobs that take advantage of any education you have, they will be simple jobs in hospitality, services, sales, business administration and other less skilled labor that don't necessarily pay very well. Cost of living is much lower in more rural areas of Canada -- depending on how you are willing to live. It can be a harder life, especially if you're used to city life. If you can get some support in the community and are willing to sacrifice some conveniences I think it is probably one of the better and more cost effective ways to live for many people right now. But it's not for everyone, and it may be especially tough for an immigrant as small communities can be insular and isolating. If you can find towns with a Ukrainian diaspora, that would be ideal, and there are already lots of them (and more every day!). Especially in the prairie provinces (Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba) which have long had a significant Ukrainian community well established.

    For jobs I'm really not sure what the outlook is for a Ukrainian immigrant. I know there's a lot of bureaucracy and obstacles in getting education and skills recognized over here, which is really a shame. I seem to find a lot of Ukrainian people working in hotels and restaurants for example, because it requires no formal certifications or proof of anything to get such a job, however often these people have extensive education and skills. It's a shame for everyone involved, but a job's a job, and you need a job to pay the bills, so at least there's something. If you can find a way into something like the trades or industry, the money is crazy good and people are desperate to hire right now, but again, the process for getting people trained and certified is long and probably very frustrating.

    I don't know what you expectation of standard of living is like. I know Ukraine used to be quite a poor country overall, but I think it was quickly improving before the war, and like Canada, I think there was quite a significant variation between the relatively wealthier cities and the remote rural towns. I think you will find it overall is similar here, although the prices and scales will probably be much different.

    Wish you all the luck, and hope you have a great experience here.

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  • worldnews World News It’s Time to End Magical Thinking About Russia’s Defeat
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 10 months ago 55%

    It's adorable that they think this is "the west's best efforts". This is more like the west throwing some speculative bids at a penny auction to see if they can score some easy wins and if not then at least they piss off the other guy who's bidding. If they think this is all the west's got to offer they're in for a real big fucking surprise.

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  • canada Canada Judge says Ottawa listing plastic items as toxic was 'unreasonable and unconstitutional'
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 10 months ago 94%

    Just like tobacco companies were (and still are) fighting to deny the harm caused by their products, there is no surprise that we see the same from plastic, chemical and oil industries. They will scream even louder every time we try to prevent them from killing us, and they will never feel a twinkle of remorse about it. They will murder millions to get at our wallets, they truly don't care about the consequences as long as they make money.

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  • minecraft Minecraft Recommended Resources for Learning Redstone?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 11 months ago 100%

    Experience is the best teacher. Practice makes perfect. Get in a creative world and build redstone machines. Copying other people's machines is absolutely fine and is a great way to learn all sorts of tricks. You learn not just by building it, but also by observing the one you've coipied, seeing it work, looking at what its parts are doing. You can tinker with the parts, change something and see if it does something different. If there's a machine you don't understand how it works, don't be intimidated by it, break it down until you understand how it does work. And that's where the next question comes in.

    Things like "quasiconnectivity" honestly reflect things I would call more of a bug that has been turned into a feature. There's no way to make it intuitive because it's non-intuitive by design, it makes no sense that certain blocks don't work in certain cases or if the power comes in from one location and not another, or they need a block update to happen before they work, or that a block update makes them work when it doesn't seem like it should, and while you will certainly run into them by accident sometimes (and it's annoying!) you can also use these unexpected things to your advantage create really elaborate and bizarre effects (or more often just really compact ones). But unless you have a specific need for that compact/unexpected process or layout you probably don't need to worry about it. It's something you learn with experience when you're trying to figure out why the thing you're making isn't working the way you expect it to be working.

    The other thing you're asking about, T Flip Flops are a kind of digital logic circuits that are actually from the real world. In many ways (at least when it's not dealing with buggy quasiconnectivity effects), redstone signals actually behave like a perfect digital circuit would. Electrical engineers and computer designers typically design their logic using all kinds of digital "building blocks", some of the most basic and well known are gates (AND/OR/NOR/XOR/etc) and flip flops. Flip flops are special because they can form permanent digital storage. That is true in minecraft also, and once you learn both what these do and how they can be used, you can also learn how to implement each one in Minecraft. The best way to learn more about these is to study digital logic. With enough patience Minecraft is effectively turing-complete, and can build redstone computers of unlimited size and capacity.

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  • nostupidquestions No Stupid Questions Can a gun break glass with just sounds alone?
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  • cecilkorik cecilkorik 11 months ago 100%

    It's possible but not likely or common. Glass is stronger than most people give it credit for. Most "hollywood" glass is actually panes of sugar. You could certainly arrange things so that the gun's pressure wave has a good chance of stressing and breaking glass, but it would take special preparations and effort and the gun would probably have to be very close to the glass. It's almost unheard of for it to happen normally unless you specifically shoot at the glass.

    Someone like mythbusters could probably test this pretty effectively, but based on my experience around guns and glass, I suspect they'd come to the same conclusion.

    A not directly related but still interesting video was done by the slowmo guys on youtube

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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearBU
    Build a PC cecilkorik 1 year ago 100%
    Recommend me a high end case (mid/full tower) with practical features, no tempered glass and minimal decoration

    I don't like the weight or fragility of huge tempered glass side panels which seems to be the default for any case that is over $100... plexiglass/acrylic and some RGB are acceptable although honestly the aesthetics are pretty much irrelevant and I don't need them. I don't want a "cheap" case either. I've cut enough fingers on poorly finished steel rattle-trap boxes and I really can't stand them. Enough about what I don't want though. What I DO want is a case that's focused on practical features, good airflow, quiet, well-made, easy to build in, roomy without being absurdly enormous, not too unconventionally laid out so that wires will reach while allowing good cable management -- basically, something that was designed thoughtfully. My current case is a Corsair 900D and other than the fact that it's way bigger than I'd like, I'm generally pretty happy with it, but I'm not sure what else is out there that would even be comparable, Corsair seems to have gone to tempered glass in all their larger cases and I'm not very familiar with all the other manufacturers out there nowadays.

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