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2 yr. ago
  • 50 y/o: get the fuck out of my cave.

  • OK, now I see it. That might have been a bit subtle for me after work.

  • Singh stepped down, he's gone.

  • Gulp

  • That's exactly what I'm saying. The NDP voters had to be strategic and put support behind the least-worse option in their eyes. So the NDP suffered pretty heavily in what became an either-or race. Singh wasn't really a factor either way.

  • Gulp

  • That's a stretch. The NDP collapse ended up being collateral damage from Trump's big mouth.

  • Singh wasn't going to be able to overcome the polarization that Trump created. IN any normal election, he's fine. But nobody wanted to chance a Polievre administration maple magaing our way through the next 3.7 years.

  • As a continent, yes

  • Everything north of the Darien Gap is considered NA.

  • I grieve for the death of sarcasm.

  • I though BoxBuddy was installed by default on uBlue distros? It works quite well, too.

  • Was there a political purpose? Sounds more like a mental health problem.

  • You're giving people shit about "professional" and "random hack shit" and you just tried to use Pepto-Bismal to anchor a piece of wire.

    JFC.

  • Well, when I moved to the AIO, the documentation was plain wrong on several points. I submitted a bunch of changes that I had to do to make it work and they worked those changes in for the most part. Now it seems pretty workable, as a friend of mine used it to set his instance up and said it seemed to go fairly smoothly.

  • And here I am having used it for a decade and perfectly happy. I try other ones like Owncloud every once in a while and find them lacking. It was slow once upon a time but if you changed to postgres and used redis, it improved immensely. Today it's quite fast and the sync has been working great for a long time.

    Use docker-compose with the AIO and it'll be a lot easier to manage. There's example compose files in the github repo.

  • Selfhosted @lemmy.world
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    How do you handle absolutely critical alerts on your Android phone?

    I currently do a lot of my monitoring via MQTT for my solar system etc. I currently use MQTT Alert and set up my alerts to ring my phone at top volume until silenced. But I have missed more than one alert because I don't think the background agent is always active and it doesn't necessarily start when I reboot the phone. While the application does "monitor" the MQTT connection, it only makes a short sound if it drops, with no followup until you notice that there was a notification and go back into it to figure out why the connection is down.

    Does anyone have foolproof way of getting things like security alerts that will always trigger on the phone, without having to check the phone 10 times a day to be sure the application is on and the connection is active?

    Selfhosted @lemmy.world
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    OpenID Connect Single Sign-On Identity & Access Management

    Rauthy is a lightweight and easy to use OpenID Connect Identity Provider. It aims to be simple to both set up and operate, with very secure defaults and lots of config options, if you need the flexibility. It puts heavy emphasis on Passkeys and a very strong security in general. The project is written in Rust to be as memory efficient, secure and fast as possible, and it can run on basically any hardware. If you need Single Sign-On support for IoT or headless CLI tools, it's got you covered as well. You get High-Availability, client branding, UI translation, a nice Admin UI, Events and Auditing, and many more features. By default, it runs on top of Hiqlite and does not depend on an external database (Postgres as an alternative) to make it even simpler to operate, while scaling up to millions of users easily.

    Selfhosted @lemmy.world
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    Email hosting over NNCP

    Linux @lemmy.ml
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    Hoster - FreeBSD hypervisor framework with Bhyve, pf, and ZFS.

    KDE @lemmy.kde.social
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    Where can I get some help to figure out why a plasmoid I'm trying to build is failing?

    I've tried to slap together a plasmoid but having trouble debugging why it's saying it's not written for Plasma6. I'm just hoping someone could throw eyes at it and tell me why I'm an idiot. The documentation on plasmoids is all over the place wrt versions and packaging, and I have no clue how to debug it on a remote VM I'm using so I don't clutter up my desktop with dependencies.

    Linux @lemmy.ml
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    Fast/Realtime Zstd compression, performanc increases in latest btrfs updates.

    Lemmy.world Support @lemmy.world
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    Doesn't look like there's any mods currently.

    Linux @lemmy.ml
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    Notes on coreutils in Rust

    With Ubuntu changing to the Rust implementation of coreutils, what does that mean for performance?

    Linux @lemmy.ml
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    Microsoft Proposes "Hornet" Security Module For The Linux Kernel

    Linux @lemmy.ml
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    FOSS project attacks on Github, malware injected in forks ransomware Linux machines

    Apparently there's a bunch of projects getting hit with this, fairly obscure ones though. Project gets forked, suddenly get a pile of stars more than the original, and then there's a curl-bash pipe inserted into it that runs some ransomeware that encrypts ~/Documents.

    About a dozen other projects linked in here from another developer (excuse the Reddit link): https://old.reddit.com/r/golang/comments/1jbzuot/someone_copied_our_github_project_made_it_look/

    homeassistant @lemmy.world
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    Why the alleged ESP32 backdoor couldn’t happen here (CHERioT)

    cheriot.org Why the alleged ESP32 backdoor couldn’t happen here

    If you’ve been following the news this weekend, you’ll have seen articles about a vulnerability (alleged to be an intentional backdoor) in ESP32 microcontrollers. The news is somewhat overhyped (the attacks probably require physical access) but it provides an opportunity to look at what we did in CH...

    This should be of interest to anyone using ESP32 devices currently and is seeing the influx of the RISC-V ISA devices coming up.

    Hopefully the future of IOT might include device drivers that can't suborn devices like the ones for the ESP32 can, by compartmentalizing memory space on the device, and auditing the compilation of such drivers.

    Linux @lemmy.ml
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    The benefits of using scripts over aliases

    I've done something similiar to this over the years for organization purposes and not having to change much between shells except add a path. You can also add cases that check your shell and do something slightly different if needed.

    Android @lemmy.world
    ikidd @lemmy.world
    Android @lemmy.world
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    Goodbye K-9 Mail: A so-long to the community

    Linux @lemmy.ml
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    The Secret Maze of Debian Images

    Delve into the wondrous labyrinth of sparkling images that is the Debian build output.

    Cooking @lemmy.world
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    Periodic cooking of eggs

    Egg cooks are challenged by the two-phase structure: albumen and yolk require two cooking temperatures. Separation or a compromise temperature to the detriment of food safety or taste preference are the options. In the present article, we find that it is possible to cook albumen and yolk at two temperatures without separation by using periodic boundary conditions in the energy transport problem. Through mathematical modeling and subsequent simulation, we are able to design the novel cooking method, namely periodic cooking. Comparison with established egg cooking procedures through a plethora of characterization techniques, including Sensory Analysis, Texture Profile Analysis and FT-IR spectroscopy, confirms the different cooking extents and the different variations in protein denaturation with the novel approach. The method not only optimizes egg texture and nutrients, but also holds promise for innovative culinary applications and materials treatment.

    Selfhosted @lemmy.world
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    PSA: LetsEncrypt ending expiration notification emails

    letsencrypt.org Ending Support for Expiration Notification Emails

    Since its inception, Let’s Encrypt has been sending expiration notification emails to subscribers that have provided an email address to us. We will be ending this service on June 4, 2025. The decision to end this service is the result of the following factors: Over the past 10 years more and ...

    Ending Support for Expiration Notification Emails

    I think it's a good idea, everyone should be automating this anyway.

    KDE @lemmy.kde.social
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    Is there a way to turn off the hot corners between monitors?

    In multi-monitor, every time I run my mouse between screens, if I'm too high or low, it catches on the hot corner areas. I could see it being wanted if I were dragging a window so I could use them to snap to, but every other time it's just a pain in the ass, especially since I turn off all the hot corner functions anyway.

    homeassistant @lemmy.world
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    Satellite 1: Voice assistant hardware beta

    This looks like a viable competitor to the recently announced HA Voice Preview hardware. Looks like it's sold out at this point but there will be more coming. More microphones, presence detection and a builtin amplifier to run fairly substantial speakers.

    https://futureproofhomes.net/

    Selfhosted @lemmy.world
    ikidd @lemmy.world

    PinchFlat: Youtube download manager and library, integrates with Jellyfin and Kodi

    Seems like a fairly mature and well maintained project. Can be fired up in DevContainer for hacking.