One thing I haven’t seen mentioned is safe disposal. You’ll need to pick up a razor blade slot for the house (landlord probably wouldn’t be happy): https://maggardrazors.com/products/maggard-razors-blade-bank-used-blades-lifetime-wall-slot
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RHEL9 and forward require v3, and the numpy in pip as of a few versions back uses either v2 or v3 instructions, so v1 is silently broke for certain workloads. FreeBSD works on it just fine as do Debian based distributions as long as you don’t need recent versions of numpy, but there’s no telling what else out there just tries to run and fails with an illegal instruction.
historicaldocuments@lemmy.worldto
Excellent Reads@sh.itjust.works•Decrypting Matrix – Where Do Rooms Go?
1·2 天前Stream of consciousness:
The institutional users already had to have identity management in place. The PKI was already “there” so self hosting and falling back on the existing infrastructure was a pretty nice win.
To get really big as a social media site you have to monetize your users. If all the messages are encrypted in a decentralized manner then there’s no way to monetize them. It also takes away some of the “social” parts of social media. It’d be fun to see what would happen if everyone spent a day posting nothing but ASCII armored messages to web-of-trust style keys to RDDT.
Open social media sites will always have problems with bad actors and people who just kind of wander in and make themselves at home.
“Someone decided our current authentication wasn’t trusted enough so we’re adding 2FA to this system. We now need to you give us information we didn’t already have over this untrusted mechanism, which we will then trust because it’s convenient for us.”
historicaldocuments@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•Trump's $14M Reflecting Pool Paint Job Is Now Peeling Off And Floating To The Surface
11·4 天前Probably used some crappy house paint
This was comedy yesterday: https://youtu.be/Wz_JVFW83iY?t=554
It’s not nearly the first time an absurb, stupid take on something gets played to extremes for laughs only for that the be the actual path taken despite all the warnings/math/science/reality that have to be ignored. It won’t be the last, either.
audited regularly
You won’t overturn hundreds of thousands of years of human nature and ungodly profits this way. People already have the ability to vote with their wallets and they don’t for the most part. We do have at least one example of someone who tries, but I wonder how much of that page is still true today: https://stallman.org/stallman-computing.html
I was surprised to find the old Edward Bernays books online. I guess they’re just that old now. From the first book Propaganda:
In theory, everybody buys the best and cheapest commodities offered him on the market. In practice, if every one went around pricing, and chemically testing before purchasing, the dozens of soaps or fabrics or brands of bread which are for sale, economic life would become hopelessly jammed. To avoid such confusion, society consents to have its choice narrowed to ideas and objects brought to its attention through propaganda of all kinds. There is consequently a vast and continuous effort going on to capture our minds in the interest of some policy or commodity or idea.
- https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/78634/pg78634-images.html
- https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/61364/pg61364-images.html
Stallman’s notions probably aren’t going to manifest themselves in the middle of nowhere without internet. Bernays’ probably will.
Just ban the algorithms on social media and you solve a good portion of the issues they cause.
There’s no way to enforce that, and you have to have seen some bs before to recognize it again. Plus, if you’re the only kid that never sees stuff the algorithm provides then you’re right back to being surrounded by people with different knowledge sets.
“autistic kids are retarded, and you aren’t so you can’t be autistic”.
Growing in a small rural town comes with a lot of good things but also a lot of prejudices that can make your life tough if you aren’t “like the rest of the kids”.
This is why I waffle about banning “social media” for kids under a certain age. If the parents and the communities they allow say that it’s not possible for a kid to be a certain way then there’s no way for a kid to independently check. I don’t have any idea on how to balance that against the algorithm.
historicaldocuments@lemmy.worldto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Safe firearm storage may reduce blood lead levels in childrenEnglish
3·6 天前Most traditional hollowpoints aren’t designed to break apart into shrapnel. They’re designed to expand in a controlled manner. The FBI protocol is that it should expand after passing through four layers of cloth (denim, fleece, cotton, and something else), then penetrate between 12 and 18 inches through standardized ballistics gel.
A non expanding bullet might get double that much penetration if it doesn’t start tumbling. Projectiles designed for large, dangerous game are designed for no expansion and maximum penetration. It all depends on what the goal is.
There’s a lot of youtube where people have put that kind of stuff to the test if you want to dig. There are a few results out there that are non-intuitive. For example, a regular 38 special hollow point out of a modern revolver often doesn’t get enough velocity to expand, so the cavity will fill up with cloth and over penetrate the gel even though it’s substantially less powerful than a 9mm.
historicaldocuments@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•A Rivian Fender Bender Cost $42,000. Its CEO Says That Should Never HappenEnglish
1·6 天前Lots of rose colored glasses being worn here.
I will take modern rust prevention tech every day all day. The control modules and circuit boards are a hole in repairablity, and there’ll be a wall where nobody makes them anymore and the specs are not published (considered proprietary/trade secret/whatever), and that whole vehicle will just have to be scrapped. The world won’t ever see the end of old body-on-frame vehicles with crate engines. Speaking for myself the “rose colored glasses” is a wish for the best of both worlds. I wouldn’t doubt it’s out there being done somewhere, but I’m sure it’s cost prohibitive to do it, or people are doing it for themselves.
Maybe I’m just complaining because I don’t personally have the time/knowledge/workspace to do what I want in that area. C’est la vie.
historicaldocuments@lemmy.worldto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Safe firearm storage may reduce blood lead levels in childrenEnglish
4·6 天前No. They keep the projectile from over-penetrating the intended target.
historicaldocuments@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What’s with all the furry porn on this platform?
7·8 天前I ended up creating an account just to block communities/users. At the time there was a poster posting to his own instance that was federated with lemmy.world, and he was reposting nothing but reddit posts, and the volume was such that they had to go. With no algorithm there’s no way to just see subscribed stuff without losing out on discovering new things.
And just a tip, Lemmy will let you export (to JSON) your configuration options to include who you’ve blocked.
historicaldocuments@lemmy.worldto
NonCredibleDefense@piefed.social•I'm not sure I'm on enough drugs for thisEnglish
2·8 天前LLNL uploads slides to slideshare for fans of having to create third party accounts to access US tax payer funded presentations: https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/yeaw-llnl-multi-domain-deterrence-yeaw/47797999
Who defines the untrusted applications though?
¯\(ツ)/¯
If GNOME wrote it then they probably trust it. If you’re using GNOME, then you’ve accepted their security model on some level.
At least you know to go look for it. Attackers will only get more sophisticated:
according to their stated security model, untrusted applications must not be allowed to communicate with the secret service.
That won’t be a popular stance to take when someone eventually steals a bunch of cached, unlocked credentials off of D-BUS because of an oversight somewhere in the npm/aur/pip/cargo/whatever ecosystem.
More rabbit hole:
historicaldocuments@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•A Rivian Fender Bender Cost $42,000. Its CEO Says That Should Never HappenEnglish
1·9 天前What kind of car?
historicaldocuments@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•A Rivian Fender Bender Cost $42,000. Its CEO Says That Should Never HappenEnglish
6·9 天前They used to be. Go back far enough in time and you could climb up under the hood into the engine bay to work on it. All that went by the wayside to get smaller packaging, lighter weight, and better fuel efficiency.
Now you need special tools or special code readers to solve/diagnose all vehicle problems. The large scale farmers are dealing with this now with the large combines and harvesters needing a tech with special equipment to read all the codes where the older tractors from the 70s and 80s can be repaired.
historicaldocuments@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•400+ Arch Linux AUR Packages Compromised in a Supply Chain Attack Deploying InfostealersEnglish
2·10 天前Well, nothing to do but start at the first one and work our way down…




There is no louder whining than a right winger realizing that the good ole’ boy network they spent so much time trying to worm their way into won’t have them.