wizardbeard

joined 2 years ago
[–] wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 20 points 6 days ago

That fucking booru tag underscore got a genuine laugh from me.

[–] wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 96 points 1 week ago

They crawl wikipedia too, and are adding significant extra load on their servers, even though Wikipedia has a regularly updated torrent to download all its content.

[–] wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 24 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

I think he must attract a certain amount of viewers from the "train wreck" effect. He literally was using the stench from the sun hitting a decomposing rat corpse in his room as an "alarm clock" for a while. He has had roaches crawl across him live and not reacted.

So I can kind of understand getting some sort of twisted satisfaction that you're doing better, or having the same sort of fascination people have with train wrecks and disasters.

What I don't get is why anyone cares about his takes on anything. The man willingly lives in decomposing filth. He's clearly not a source of knowledge or good opinions on fucking anything.

I kind of miss the ol slugdogs. At least back then no one was trying to tell us it was coming for our jobs.

Most of these trimmed down portable Wiis boot into a homebrew menu as they don't have the IR lights attached by default (the Wii "sensor" bar which is just two IR lightbulbs), needed to navigate the menu using a Wiimote.

It's a novelty. Hardware hackers have been making smaller and more portable Wiis for years, finding more parts of the motherboard they can cut off, ways to rearrange mobo parts and reconnect them without impacting functionality, discrete parts they can replace with more modern smaller equivalents, etc.

This represents the smallest they've been able to cut down Wii hardware, still have it be functional, and still have the core be the original hardware, not a general use CPU with an emulation solution running over top. It's not a commercial product meant to compete with emulators on existing portable devices like phones and SBCs.

[–] wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Does anyone really go back and play the older ones after the latest installment comes out?

Personally I just stick with whatever latest one I picked up.

I just don't see it as the kind of series where "keeping up" by playing through the old ones matters.

[–] wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Sidestepped that completely. Got 64GB when I built my desktop because RAM prices were low.

20GB used up by whatever other shit I have open? No problem, still enough left for whatever I'm actively working on.

Suffice to say this has not actually helped with the issue.

Nostalgia is a hard drug

There's a lot more to this article than the summary blurb would indicate.

It's mainly talking about how regardless of actual quality of output, market forces around AI are now allowing manager types to require more output from "mid-upper" class workers, and it's all shifting those positions downward to being treated more like assembly line jobs than they have been for decades.

Concerning trends, driven largely by market forces instead of any true quality or capability of AI.

[–] wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 16 points 1 week ago (2 children)

I've been through the hellscape where managers used missed metrics as evidence for why we didn't need increased headcount on an internal IT helpdesk.

That sort of fuckery is common when management gets the idea in their head that they can save money on people somehow without sacrificing output/quality.

I'm pretty certain they were trying to find an excuse to outsource us, as this was long before the LLM bubble we're in now.

[–] wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 19 points 1 week ago

I kind of love that Kanye had that breakdown where he released the Heil Hitler track and went to twitter posting all caps shit saying he was a nazi, and the internet's collective reaction seems to have just kind of rolled their eyes and move on. Just pure apathy. It's not shocking or contreversial, more "Yeah, we all figured that out ages ago. Fuck off."

 

NIST is a US government org that releases industry guidlines on best practices for cybersecurity.

I know that infosec and sysadmin work aren't the same, but in my experience it often falls to sysadmins and systems engineers to fill the gaps. Hope this is useful.

 

NIST is a US government org that produces industry guidlines on best practices for cybersecurity, and they've just released a massive update to their framework.

 

Soichi Terada is a House music artist who was popular in Japan in the 90s. Outside of Japan, he's mostly known for his soundtrack work on the PS1 game Ape Escape.

This is one of his covers/arrangements/remixes, where he plays around with elements of another song. Not quite sure what to classify it as, otherwise I'd label it in the title.

I find his music to have a pretty distinct style, and I like using it as background while I study, code, or do other work.

 

I'm looking for a free, reputable ad blocker on the Play Store. Something that does local host/filter list filtering using the VPN feature, like Blokada 4 or 5 (before they started cloud hosting the filtering features as a money/data grab).

Personally, I'm no stranger to F-Droid or Obtanium and even have dipped my toes into ADB.

I need this for family members when they start asking, so I can point them at something decent that won't try to fleece them and get on with my life unburdened by family tech support hell. Something they can install through the Play Store they already have and easily switch on and off if something they "need" isn't working.

So that eliminates just setting their DNS to an ad blocking one in their Wi-Fi settings. Wouldn't follow them off that specific connection, and wouldn't be an easy toggle if something broke.

 

Microsoft's documentation for revoking user access from Azure AD currently references cmdlets from the AzureAD PowerShell module, which will be deprecated on June 30th.

Microsoft reccomends using the MSGraph module or API as a replacement for the AzureAD module, but I'm having a hell of a time with it.

I'm trying to figure out how to use PoweShell to wipe corporate data off a user's BYODs, and I'm stuck trying to get a list of a user's BYODs through Graph. Ultimately this will be part of automation kicked off when a user leaves the company.

Queries for devices and managed devices for a given user seem to be missing devices that are shown through Azure Portal when looking at a user in Azure AD and then looking at their devices. The query for deleting data is also unclear in whether it wipes the whole device or just corporate data.

Does anyone have any resources or guidance on this? Most of what I'm finding is outdated or too vague for me to be comfortable utilizing it.

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