dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
What I'm thinking. If it took that long for my server to shut down, I would just sync and force reset. Although tbh, most things are VMs now, and those reboot pretty fast and would likely not be affected much by these improvements.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
A ton of people using github barely understand the different between github and git and often think they are the same thing or that github and git are somewhat related more than they really are.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
Does that only happen when it tries to download files ending in .db.sig? If so, I think I read somewhere that db have no sig. So as long as it otherwise works, this error is cosmetic.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
You could use a custom XferCommand
command per PACMAN.CONF(5)
with wget using -6
Something like this might work:
XferCommand = /usr/bin/wget -6 -c -O %o %u
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
If you want something similar to vim or neovim, but without all the fuss learning how to configure it and install plugins and such, you could try helix.
dragonfly4933 Now • 90%
I would return it, but if you are curious you can try some of the following to get experiencing identifying bad disks.
You could try a different computer or controller to be sure.
If you can get some writes/reads to work, you can use badblocks or dm-crypt: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Badblocks#Alternatives
Badblocks will write known data to disk then read it to verify its good. If the disk is malicious, this can be faked. badblocks is also a little slow.
Using dm-crypt in the wiki will write zeros through dm-crypt which will result in random noise being written to disk, then compare with zeros to verify reads are good. This can not be faked easily since the zero stream is encrypted as it is written to disk.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
The last I looked into it, the best way to do it was to get an older kindle so you could download the older DRM copies of books from amazon. But I think some newer books are using only the newer DRM which I don't think has been cracked.
It has probably been at least a year since I checked. If you do end up finding an updated method, I would be interested.
dragonfly4933 Now • 95%
I would advise just creating ~/.bin
or ~/.local/share/bin
and dropping it in there. As long as you have permission to that directory, yt-dlp should be able to easily update itself.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
There is a lot of development from China in the linux kernel. Also, to my knowledge there is a lot of chinese work in qemu and libvirt as well.
dragonfly4933 Now • 93%
I was very against Biden dropping out, but i think this is a pretty good point. I think it is still very risky for her to run due to race and sex discrimination, but it might not be a predetermined loss at least.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
Don't buy into tape. It is costly and is inferior to hard drives by most metrics for smaller scale operations. You can easily get 8TB hard drives for less than $20/TB. While tape is cheaper than that, the drive to actually use it is expensive, plus you get all the disadvantages of the tape itself.
Fun fact: you can probably buy a whole server, external sas card and disk shelf for less than the cost of a somewhat modern tape drive.
If you are wanting to store less than 100TB of data, it would probably be cheaper to use drives, then in 3-5 years buy another set of disks and still be ahead compared to tape.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
Yes, but that is always possible with most protocols, including imap.
Take a look a FUSE and you will see all the creative things people have done with filesystems. Or DNS, lots of fun things have been done with that also.
dragonfly4933 Now • 60%
You are right, you can't use only information Ukraine or Russia provides. But it probably is the case that Ukraine was stomping Russia for pennies on the dollar earlier in the war. However, Russia is not a static force. They learn and change their tactics, and Russia spends more resources now than they did earlier.
It would be a grave mistake to stop aid to Ukraine while they are still willing and able to fight.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
They can do both, and if their stance is at all ideologically motivated, then it is necessary to focus on more than just the low hanging fruit of doing reviews.
The free software movement is more than just the free software existing. It is also congruent to the laws that permit it and extending rights
Right to repair is about more than simply fixing things. It's about going after companies and lobbying to get actual rights enshrined into law.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
Which one is it?
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
If you were willing to spend money, why not just get it from RH directly.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
The union negotiations could include in the contract that AI generated actors are not allowed when SAG is involved.
That doesn't completely stop AI, since they could try to use non union actors or no actors at all.
The issue with AI is that it is software, and software can scale very quickly. So large amounts of jobs could very quickly get automated without allowing workers and the economy to slowly adjust over time. Switchboard operator was just a single job in a single industry.
It will also lead to more consolidation of wealth since existing bussinesses stand to make great savings getting rid of people, and the AI itself is privately owned. Funny enough, this could also blow up in their face since that creates inventive for people to vote.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
Note that v1 and v2 torrents use slightly different url fragments, so this won't work quite as easily as you think. It would be possible tell the difference because they use different hashes with different lengths, but most people probably won't know.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
There are definitely differences, but usually they don't matter from a simple address and routing perspective.
For example, there is no ARP in IPv6. Instead another protocol is used called Neighbor Discovery Protocol, which actually is done through ICMPv6. Therefore, if you blindly block all ICMPv6, your network may break.
Once you have a grasp on v6, it is much better than v4 because even the smallest common v6 network size of /64 is many times larger than all the addresses in v4. Every device can have it's own global ip, so you no longer need nat at all. Everything can easily connect, assuming there is no firewall blocking it.
dragonfly4933 Now • 100%
It can and will work, but it will not be optimal. You will be able to connect to other peers, but other peers will not be able to connect to you. This usually isn't a big deal, but it's not great in situations where there are not many peers, and you need every connection you can get.
I am currently looking for a way to easily store and run commands, usually syncing files between two deeply nested directories whenever I want. So far I found these projects: - [Navi](https://github.com/denisidoro/navi) Rust - [marker](https://github.com/pindexis/marker) Python - [pet](https://github.com/knqyf263/pet) Go - [keep](https://github.com/OrkoHunter/keep) Python - [tbmk](https://github.com/linhx/tbmk) Go Other solutions: - Bash history using ^+r - Bash aliases - Bash functions What do you guys use?