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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)G
Posts
5
Comments
21
Joined
9 mo. ago

  • Ansible or other IaC is a great choice. If your needs are real simple, like mine, i put Gitolite on one of my mini servers and i can push/pull from there over ssh.

  • Great use of 4x5, love the texture

  • I had almost the reverse with coffee. I always liked the smell of coffee but not really the taste. Then my family bought a Nespresso machine when i was in high school, and i started adding espresso shots to hot chocolate. Then i started occasionally making espresso shots and drinking them straight. Then several years later i found myself in a hotel for work, at 6am before a shift, and they automatically brought me black coffee. I took one sip and was like "oh i guess i like coffee now" and never looked back. Yep, regular old hotel breakfast coffee got me hooked.

  • Malware in the traditional sense, as in a malicious program that sneaks its way onto your machine and runs a dangerous payload, is far far more common on Linux machines with open ports acting as servers on the internet. And even then, I'd wager that's less than 1% of the malware out there that specifically targets Windows simply due to market share. With that in mind, plain old Fedora will do just fine, especially if you leave SELinux enabled; many tutorials have you disable it if it interferes with apps/services you want to run, but they're simply being lazy, working around SELinux can be obscure at times, but it's still worth doing, and keeping it running rather than disabling it.

    Malicious webpages and phishing attempts are more likely to cause you trouble on Linux, and the OS can only do so much to protect you there. Securing against those is more about vigilance and wisdom, which it sounds like you've got covered honestly!

  • I'm not sure I'm qualified to answer, you seem to know your security needs but i'll ask anyway: what are you securing against and why? You listed your security goals, but not exactly why you need them and what you are defending against. Fair enough, but without knowing more details, I'd suggest looking at QubesOS, which specifically isolates apps into different virtual machines. You could also go with security-by-minimality, and roll your own environment with Arch or Alpine (even Gentoo if you really wanna go down the rabbit hole)

  • Security wasn't the main concern in this particular case, the headache came from the fact that they were working in IP classes, and we were working in CIDRs (EC2 security groups, for example)

  • One of the startups I worked for did business with Ford. We needed info about their networks to get them connected to our service in AWS, and in the process we learned that they still use public IPs for everything. Every workstation, server, router, etc. connected to the internet from a public IP, no NAT and only protected by extremely complicated firewall rules. Their IT team must be in constant distress, or super defensive about their architecture haha

  • I have a lifetime subscription to Filen that I got a year or so ago and have been very happy with, much nicer than Proton Drive in my experience.

  • Film Photography @lemmy.world

    Crescent Moon Sunset

  • Film Photography @lemmy.world

    Cruising Through The Nebula

  • Really? Interesting. I think the version on Alive 2007 combined with Alive and Prime Time of Your Life is like the pinnacle of that album.

  • I'd diagnose this response as 10% the effect of mushrooms and 90% the effect of watching Ex Machina alone. I walked out of my room at 1am shell shocked from that movie and had a quick conversation with my roommate in the kitchen that i remember nothing about except how reassured i felt that she wasn't a robot. Excellent movie.

  • Sunrise

    Jump
  • Man this is a great shot, excellent colors and nicely balanced composition. You could totally leave it as is, but if it were mine, I would crop away the entire bottom half, right where the water starts to get blurry, leaving the top half as an amazing panoramic.

  • Film Photography @lemmy.world

    Gossipers

  • Fair points but you and the other commenter are, in my opinion, thinking too near-term. On the scale of hundreds of thousands to millions of years, evolution starts to become a factor. The beings that leave earth to live elsewhere, on that time scale, may have been human once but would have evolved into something different, hopefully more suited to environments on other worlds. And we're not even close to the destruction of earth by the sun, which is on the order of a billion years from now.

    That's more what I meant by inevitable. Our curiosity brought us to the stars early, but we have the time here on earth to invent, adapt, grow, and change before the hard stop of needing to leave earth...assuming we survive what earth throws at us (and what we do to it) in the nearer term.

  • Interesting, I'm of the opposite mind: I think it's inevitable that we will inhabit places outside earth. Time is long, technology keeps getting better, space on earth keeps getting smaller, and there's only one way we escape the consumption of earth by the eventual expansion of the sun. We just have to make sure not to destroy ourselves here first (a tall order, it seems as of lately).

  • Thanks! The lab did a great job scanning it and I got lucky with the composition.

  • Pleasantly surprised to see Paprika in someone's list, no one i know has ever even heard of it. Such a good weird movie.

  • Agreed, this is good advice. At one time I had three of these, they're great, small, versatile, well built. All around a great machine.

  • Film Photography @lemmy.world

    Good Harbor

  • It is a 135mm lens, the film is 35mm

  • Film Photography @lemmy.world

    At the game

  • This is so stupid. 10/10 would watch forever.