- 51 Posts
- 112 Comments
DocMcStuffin@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•THE NVIDIA AI GPU BLACK MARKET | Investigating Smuggling, Corruption, & GovernmentsEnglish781·1 个月前Sweet Tech Jesus! It’s 3 and 1/2 hours long.
DocMcStuffin@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Popup Ads in Your Pickup Truck? RAM Trucks Now Feature Scammy Ads on the Center DisplayEnglish34·1 个月前Do you think Stellantis understands consent?
[ ] Yes
[ ] Ask me again in 2 weeks
DocMcStuffin@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Steam Users Rally Behind Anti-Censorship PetitionEnglish22·2 个月前Archived page: https://archive.ph/Ttyr5
Just in case.
DocMcStuffin@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•Teacher accused of having sex with 16-year-old student and telling co-workerEnglish2588·3 个月前That’s an interesting way of saying statutory rape.
DocMcStuffin@lemmy.worldto privacy@lemmy.ca•What is it with websites restricting passwords to 8 - 16 characters? Is there some technical limitation to their system??6·4 个月前What’s funny is a character isn’t necessarily a byte now. It could be 1, 2, 3, or 4 bytes. Or only 2 or 4 bytes if we include utf-16 and 32. Character encodings are fun!
DocMcStuffin@lemmy.worldto privacy@lemmy.ca•What is it with websites restricting passwords to 8 - 16 characters? Is there some technical limitation to their system??6·4 个月前There was one point in time when Intel’s website only allowed up to 14 characters and disallowed certain special characters. If I had to guess why, fear of inadequate error checking and fear of sql injection.
DocMcStuffin@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•Employee charged in killing of trucking CEO found after fire in Chicago suburb3·4 个月前This is from 2 months ago.
It’s a legend, but a fun one.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Joan#Legends
Some versions of the legend suggest that subsequent popes were subjected to an examination whereby, having sat on a so-called sedia stercoraria or ‘dung chair’ containing a hole, a cardinal had to reach up and establish that the new pope had testicles before announcing “Duos habet et bene pendentes” (“He has two and they dangle nicely”),[17] or “habet” (“he has them”) for short.[18]
@tias@discuss.tchncs.de ☝ the chair
I shit you not, it took the Catholic Church until the 1800’s to finally accept that the Earth revolves around the fucking Sun. Maybe the 1750’s if someone’s feeling generous, but they were still censoring Galileo’s and Copernicus’s books at that time.
DocMcStuffin@lemmy.worldto World News@lemmy.world•South Korea president Yoon Suk Yeol removed from office after court upholds impeachmentEnglish55·6 个月前This is how you treat wanna be despots and dictators. Remove them from power, put them on trial then throw them in jail for their crimes.
DocMcStuffin@lemmy.worldto World News@lemmy.world•Easter Eggs Are So Expensive Americans Are Dyeing PotatoesEnglish10·6 个月前Spoilers work like this:
::: spoiler shown text hidden text :::
You need the word “spoiler” after the first colons and the colons have to be at the start of the lines.
inspirational advice
make today your bitch
DocMcStuffin@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•[Discussion] What would it take to selfhost some of the backend that Tesla's connect to?English97·6 个月前The right to repair. It’s going to require the ability to make changes to the software on the vehicle. At a minimum the ability to replace the public encryption keys used to communicate with the servers. The bootloader and software is probably locked behind signing keys; so you need to be able to disable or add your own keys. I doubt anyone has access to the full protocols used to communicate with the servers. So, the full technical standard need to be released (which is never going to happen) or reversed engineered through unencrypted traffic analysis and reverse engineering the software.
A good right to repair law could require some of that be releasable while the company is still active or all if the company goes belly up. IIRC there was a smaller EV company that went bankrupt and there was a concern that once the servers were shutdown the vehicles would be bricked. Not sure what happened in the end. In any case, cars as IOT is the stupidest idea ever created.
Neat buuUUUuuut.
Does Revolt have federation?
As of right now, Revolt does not feature any federation and it is not in our feature roadmap.
[…]
What can I do with Revolt and how do I self-host?
[…]
You can self-host Revolt by:
- Using Docker Compose and our recommended guide.
- Building individual components yourself from the source code.
It’s basically a bunch of islands.
I give it a 5/10. No mention of beans, unix socks, or tankies.
DocMcStuffin@lemmy.worldto politics @lemmy.world•Workers at the nuclear weapons agency are frantically being called back | Mass layoffs that happened Thursday night at the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) are being paused16·7 个月前I don’t care if they are evil or incompetent or both. They’re decimating the federal workforce which will have long term consequences. Some of which will be fatal and not just for Americans.
Congress hasn’t passed a budget yet for the fiscal year, only a continuing resolution. The fiscal year started on Oct 1. So, Congress could include language that legalizes the buyout in the full budget, in theory*. There’s going to continue to be lawsuits against it before and after the budget becomes law. So, who knows what will happen in practice.
In any case, my take is anyone that took it will find that it won’t work out like they hoped. At a minimum they will have a stressful couple of months. At a maximum they will find that they screwed themselves.
*IANAL so apply appropriate skepticism to my Thursday evening quarterbacking.
I don’t know if I can give a straight answer. Agencies and their divisions, orgs, branches, teams have to do records management. There’s a federal law somewhere in the federal registrar. So a certain amount of historical knowledge is preserved. Where, how well, and how far back is a bunch of rabbits holes.
But what I think you might be getting at is tribal knowledge. Everything that’s passed around orally or by experience rather than being written down. There’s always that risk with people leaving and that knowledge going with them. But that impact can vary depending on agency practices, work culture, or even just the responsibilities of the person leaving.
The area I’m keeping an eye on are the people with decades of knowledge and experience that are also skilled enough to apply all that to their niche fields within an agency. They’re usually the ones in federal service for the long haul and are some of the more difficult people to get time with. If an agency is gutted and that living knowledge base is lost then the agency will struggle to fulfill the missions Congress has directed they must do as federal law.
The author does state at the end that they don’t believe in an afterlife. The title is meant to be more provocative to draw in theistic readers.
I agree with your comment. He escaped all accountability while inflicting suffering and feeling morally justified in it. Makes me sick to my stomach.