MajorHavoc

joined 11 months ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 4 points 2 hours ago

Uh....I didn't realize I had ever shared my desktop background. Huh. Neat.

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 8 points 2 hours ago

"We need to begin working toward a more rational and just system if we are to have any hope of creating a world in which Thompson’s shooting would be truly unimaginable."

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 9 points 8 hours ago

People here sometimes complain when us Linux guys are saying the same, but if you discovered that Linux is actually pretty damn excellent, wouldn't you tell people about it?

Exactly.

They tell me:

"But MajorHavok, you're insanely willing to diagnose and debug command line bullshit. How can I trust you?"

To which I reply:

"Uh...good point. But...uh... Both things can be true?"

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 3 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago)

Of the approaches you are considering, I'll share what I've tried and how I feel it went. And I'll throw in a bonus idea:

a) focus on accruing FOSS experience.

I now have substantial contribution history to a variety of projects on GitHub.

And an interesting thing happened - people stopped asking me to write FizzBuzz during interviews. Technical questions stopped pretty much entirely. Interviewers now tend to jump directly to team culture and fit questions.

I don't know if my open source commits alone are responsible, but it certainly feels like it helped me.

b) develop a big project.

I tried this before "a)", above.

While I learned a lot, I don't think it particularly helped other than what I learned along the way.

I can't recall being asked about any of my "big" projects on my GitHub, during interviews.

I've also archived pretty much all of my big projects. Big effort weekend projects don't age gracefully, for me.

c) Pivot to IT

I'm still a programmer, but I've taken on Cybersecurity and Management responsibilities, to get promoted. I've also made myself a DevOps expert, because otherwise I constantly feel like I'm dying on the "works on my machine" hill.

I've had more and less code-centric roles. I have had teams add coding to my responsibilities as soon as they learned I can code.

As a manager, I frequently pave the way for folks without coding in their job description to be allowed to code. Organizations are so much better off when subject matter experts participate in automation. But I have seen plenty of resistance to coding outside of the development team.

c-2) I have made myself a DevOps expert.

I've taken and given plenty of "developer" interviews that could have been called "DevOps".

Everybody needs DevOps. DevOps experience is always valuable.

d) write and share

I've kept up a technical blog for decades. I don't currently (or usually) feel like it is paying dividends for the effort.

A decade ago, I saw decent traffic on relevant topics. Today, I'm not convinced that any human being ever finds my site.

Search and social media feel, to me, like they are in a very bad state, right now. I figure it can only get better, but I'm not holding my breath.

It's possible that my website full of technical articles (linked from my resume) plays some part in my not getting asked FizzBuzz anymore.

One more that you didnt mention:

e) giving technical talks

I've learned that conferences are often desperate for speakers. Once I had a little evidence on my website that I won't break down on stage, I started to have talk proposals get accepted.

It's scary as hell, but I'm not sure anything has the same professional networking impact.

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 2 points 9 hours ago

Yeah. I know the feeling. Some of the larger story beats of the clone goo doctor arc are pretty predictable, and maybe didn't demand a full two part episode. But some of the individual moments are brilliant.

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 2 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) (2 children)

There's also Matt Smith's doctor and a goo-clone interacting at one point. That one was fun.

I'm just coughing into my hand.

And I'm glad to say, it's not funny that things got this far. It's sad. If I did laugh, it would only be to not cry.

I don't have to admit to feeling relieved that maybe a couple of asshat CEOs are going to die , maybe instead of a random selection of my kids and grandkids someday under the current system.

Unless I'm ever up for jury selection, then I think I'm legally bound to admit that I don't believe any crime was committed. I'm already at "self defense" and "not guilty", and I dont know anything - except the nature of the system that the killed person was instrumental to.

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 59 points 1 day ago (7 children)

If I were running Medica, I would retire and bribe my way into witness protection.

Or maybe I would Scrooge / Grinch Christmas morning my ass as hard as possible.

There's a lot more people hurting out there. We need to do a lot better. Specifically, billionares and private oligopoly CEOs need to do a lot better. Past generations understood that. This guy paid with his life for not understanding it.

I hate victim blaming, but I can't honestly call this asshole the victim in all this. The victims were a bunch of kids and parents and siblings whose names we will never hear in the news.

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 42 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

Everyone is losing their minds because they're afraid there'll be a run on popcorn, not because anyone will miss a waste of space healthcare CEO.

If people don't feel like we can make things better with negotiation, this is where it goes. I'm not up for pretending I didn't see this coming.

This may be good time to be an experienced professional body guard, because there's a lot of healthcare CEOs left and no way was the alleged attacker (I didn't see shit!) the only person they've hurt.

"fuck it. We tried. Oh well."

[–] MajorHavoc@programming.dev 20 points 1 day ago

Lol. "Internal party divisions" is what we're calling "we can't win the presidency without running (and putting up with) an idiot racist misogynist sociopath", nowadays?

 

This came across my GamingOnLinux feed, and I figured y'all might share my interest.

I'm excited for this dock release because my simple JSAUX HDMI dongle has always been a more reliable SteamDeck dock, for me, than my official SteamDeck dock.

I understand recent patches to the SteamDeck official dock may have solved many of the issues I was having.

But it's still cool to see a brand I already trust adding a targeted SteamDeck product.

I don't see whether it accounts for my habit of keeping my SteamDeck in a protective case, though.

 

I'm usually the one saying "AI is already as good as it's gonna get, for a long while."

This article, in contrast, is quotes from folks making the next AI generation - saying the same.

18
Ultimate Spider-Man (programming.dev)
submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by MajorHavoc@programming.dev to c/comicbooks@lemmy.world
 

Uh...I guess this is a public service announcement.

"Ultimate Spider-Man" is really good.

Core Concept

The Maker has remade a world with no heroes for his evil cabal to rule over.

Iron Lad sent a series of time machine gift bags to people who would have been heroes - including Peter Parker - giving them the option to bootstrap their life to their former heroic destiny.

This subverts my expectations, while offering new insights into established characters.

Detailed spoilers

  • J. Jonah Jameson is a better man with Ben Parker alive to mentor him
  • Harry Osborn is probably either batshit crazy or destined to be the greatest bromance in Peter's life...and maybe both.
  • Peter and MJs kids are adorable and perfect.
  • The comic completely fails to address how this version of Peter got his webbing, and the suit that Iron Lad provided is capable of an awfut lot of Venom's abilities...Might Iron Lad have cut a dangerous corner in his desperation?
 

"We need policies that keep middlemen weak."

stood out to me.

Many of my influences have railed against middle men, and I think that's unfair. I've worked with plenty of middle men that made everyone then better off.

I've also had the unique displeasure that at least half of all links shared with me in recent years have been to a site called "Instagram", where I am unable to access the content without an account (which I refuse to make because Zuckerberg is a creepy stalker.)

I find it deeply weird that such a locked ecosystem now controls so much attention.

I find Cory Doctorow's thoughts on the problem and potential solutions to be both hopeful and cathartic.

127
The Cult of Microsoft (www.wheresyoured.at)
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by MajorHavoc@programming.dev to c/technology@lemmy.world
 

Kind of an inflammatory title, but I like to let it match for accessibility.

I've been enjoying Ed Zitron's articles lately, because they call out CEOs who aren't doing their jobs.

I'm sharing this partly because I'm honestly surprised to see criticism of Satya Nadella's leadership. I think Satya has been good for Microsoft, overall, compared to previous leaders. And I was as convinced as anyone else when the "growth mindset" first hit the news cycle. It sounds fine, after all.

TL;DR:

  • Satya has baked "growth mindset deeply into the culture at Microsoft"
  • Folks outside of the original study authors have generally failed to reproduce evidence of any value in "growth mindset"
  • Microsoft is, of course "all in" on their own brand of AI tools, and their AI tools are doing the usual harmful barf, eat the barf, barf grosser barf, re-eat that barf data corruption cycle.
  • Some interesting speculation that none of the AI code flaunted by Microsoft and Google is probably high value. Which is a speculation I confidently share, but still, I think, speculation. (Lines-of-code is a bat shit insane way to measure engineer productivity, but some folks think it's okay when an AI is doing it.)
 

You might recognize me from such comments as "All AI hucksters are scammers.", and "AI is just an excuse to enshitify while laying off real engineers.", and "I actually use current generation LLMs for a bunch of things and it can be pretty great."

In this article science fiction author and futurist Cory Doctorow is on my favorite AI soap box, and raises some interesting points.

2
submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by MajorHavoc@programming.dev to c/minetest@lemmy.ml
 

Since I couldn't find it, here's a bare minimum guide to starting using the Pipeworks mod.

This recipe builds a trivial item sorter.

Mods you need:

  • Pipeworks
  • Mesecon
  • I3 Inventory (optional, strongly recommend)

Resources you need (if building this in survival):

  • 24 wood planks for 4 chests
  • a lot of leaves (for plastic for tubes and for the injector)
  • a lot of mese Crystals (for the injector and the sorting tube segment and the blinky plant)
  • 3 saplings (for the blinky plant)
  • 2 iron for the injector

To build the parts - look up the part recipes in I3 Inventory, or the MineTest wiki.

The Build:

In this order, place, on flat ground, in a straight line:

  • A chest
  • A stack wise filter injector
  • A pneumatic tube segment
  • A sorting pneumatic tube segment
  • A final chest

Now place the last two chests on the ground on either side of the 'sorting pneumatic tube segment'.

Now place a 'blinky plant' beside the 'stackwise filter injector', to get it running. Yes, it must be a blinky plant.

Now throw some crap in the first chest and watch it get moved randomly to the other 3 chests.

Now, grab an item you want sorted, say 'dirt block'. Left click on the 'sorting pneumatic tube segment'. Put the dirt block next to one of the colors. Put more dirt blocks into the first chest.

Watch the dirt blocks follow the color you chose.

Repeat with more item types.

Now your inventory is sorted, kind of.

Finally, add additional chests and sorting tube segments, as needed, to suit your personal play style.

Edit: Of course now I found a decent wiki page that has more detail, so I put that in the URL.

139
PSA - MineTest on SteamDeck (blog.rubenwardy.com)
submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by MajorHavoc@programming.dev to c/steamdeck@sopuli.xyz
 

MineTest on a SteamDeck is so fun, y'all.

(Edit: MineTest is a free and open source game engine that started as a clone of Minecraft, and has grown to be that, and much more.)

I would have tried it sooner, if someone had mentioned it to me, so I'm mentioning it to you.

Edit: Disclaimer, I'm not the author of this blog. It's the walkthrough I followed to start playing.

2
Newbie Lessons (programming.dev)
submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by MajorHavoc@programming.dev to c/minetest@lemmy.ml
 

Here's things I learned, so far, as a new player of Minetest. I'm new at this, so I'll gladly update this post with any corrections.

  • Mineclone2 is a great place to just start playing!
  • When confident enough to choose my own plugins, I switched back to MineGame/default, for the bigger library of available plugins.
  • Mesecons is redstone, but looks way nicer. Insulated wires alone look like a huge sanity saver.
  • The world is dramatically taller and deeper, so you're going to want a teleporter or elevator plugin. I found Travelnet a practical option.
  • if you're coming from Java edition Minecraft, you may be pleasantly surprised how much faster, lighter and more efficient Mineclone is.
  • The hang glider plugin is a giggle and a half.
  • Building a Cotton farm was a quicker path to beds and hang gliders, for me, than searching for sheep.
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