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SlakrHakr , to asklemmy in What is a product you would never recommend?

Roku anything

I have a tv from them and one day the PBS kids app just stopped working. I contacted customer support and they just told me it was the app developer’s fault, nothing to be done. Waited months thinking it would eventually resolve but never did.

And recently where they:

  1. Blocked people from using their tvs until they accepted a new agreement and
  2. Filed for a patent that defines how they can start overlaying ads on top of other connected devices over hdmi

Glad I shut off wifi to my tv years ago and plugged in a separate smart tv hdmi dongle. And not getting anywhere near anything that says Roku on the packaging again.

abbadon420 , to showerthoughts in If malls continue to shut down and decay over the next twenty years, someone should turn them into retirement communities for GenX and Millennials.

It’s funny you think millenials can afford to retire at 60

Rhynoplaz OP ,

We have to get it ready for the Xers first, then we can start to move in once we hit 86 or so.

Moonrise2473 , to selfhosted in Server Monitoring software recommendations

I like munin, it’s very limited, a bit hard to configure and doesn’t have many features but uses almost no resources

solidgrue , to asklemmy in Eduroam question, what can they see?
@solidgrue@lemmy.world avatar

Eduroam is just a network of RADIUS servers that cross-honor authentication among participating institutions. If your org participates in Eduroam, it means users from your org can connect to the eduroam WiFi SSID at other orgs, and vice-versa. It’s helpful for traveling academics and visitors from other .edus

It’s also frequently used to authenticate access to online resources like online libraries, journals, and research infrastructure. Useful for when schools collaborate on grant projects.

The eduroam service requires a CA certificate to validate the APs broadcasting eduroam’s SSIDs are providing the real service. The issuer of that certificate isn’t one of the well-known SSL certificate resellers, so it needs to be installed in your device’s CA store, or configured in your 802.1x WPA supplicant. The protocol used is EAP-TLS, if you’re curious.

So what can the hosting institution see? Not much, from an authentication standpoint. Transactionally, the hosting institution sees a username and org name in an outer transaction. An encrypted payload with your user credentials is then tunneled to your home org’s servers which either validate or invalidate those credentials. If the home org validates, then the hosting org lets you connect.

Beyond that, the network admins can “see” whatever they can normally see when you’re using someone else’s infrastructure: your DNS queries, the application ports you use, a lot of encrypted SSL/HTTPS traffic, plus the contents of anything that isn’t encrypted or sent over SSL.

Some orgs disallow tunneling traffic out when you’re on their eduroam, so sometimes IPSec, SSH, Tor, and maybe even WireGuard are disallowed.

Colorfulhipp OP ,

Sorry, I think this is very helpful but unfortunately I’m not english + don’t have much knowledge on the matter, so I really don’t understand much of the things you said…

Thank you for answering, but I must ask you (if you have the time) to explain if they could see or not what I was doing 😭

_edge ,

Short version: No, most likely not.

They see who you are, but not what you do.

Slightly longer: Someone can probably see your connections to google and notion and infer that you are using Notion, but they cannot see your Google/Notion account and not what content you are working on. (Also those are very popular tools, unless you are the enemy of the state number 1, why would they care?)

Even longer: If your laptop or your gmail or your notion account is compromised, they can see everything.

Shialac , to asklemmy in Fiat doesn't work on a finite planet. Crypto has failed on its goals. What is a better way to be economically secure?

Eat the rich

alsaaas , to science_memes in Hats
@alsaaas@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I don’t know much about 3d printer filaments, but wouldn’t that increase the plastic pollution of the water?

oxideseven ,

This was in an aquarium.

alsaaas ,
@alsaaas@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

yes and? Isn’t the health of it’s inhabitants important as well?

cyberfae ,
@cyberfae@lemmy.world avatar

There is a special coating that you put on decorations not meant for aquariums that will prevent any chemicals from leaking into the water.

alsaaas ,
@alsaaas@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

huh, TIL

Th4tGuyII , to science_memes in Old AF
@Th4tGuyII@fedia.io avatar

Given that complex life as we know it is only about 500-600 million years old, around the time of the Cambrian Explosion, the only image that comes to mind is two Eukaryotic cells getting frisky, having a one replication stand, then parting ways

MonkderVierte , (edited ) to science_memes in Old AF

Just for clarification, mammalia are much older.

And specifically about balls; while the Wikipedia article wasn’t helpful this time, this article says it was 100 million years ago.

krakenfury , to linux in Convert second disk with OS to pure data storage

You haven’t provided any info about your partition scheme for either drive, but I assume you’ve got your bootloader installed in an EFI partition in the newer drive. You will still have an EFI partition on the old drive created by the Ubuntu installer, so just be sure you know which bootloader you’re using.

Option 1 and 2 aren’t functionally any different. It’s not clear what issues you’re worried about, but if you’re nervous about breaking the Ubuntu installation, you might just want to wait until you can get the new drive.

You also don’t give any indication of how much data you have that you want to keep. If the 2tb drive is almost full, you have fewer options than if it is mostly empty or half full. You could resize your EXT4 partition and create a new partition, for example, allowing you to mount a fresh, clean filesystem to a subfolder in your home directory. Once the data migration is finished, you can format the old partitions and mount them somewhere else, or resize the newer partition over them. Be aware that your HDD will eventually fail mechanically, however. Maybe 5 years from now or next week, but they all fail someday.

It’s not clear to me what the goal of option 3 is, but it’s dependent on how you use your machine. If you want to install a lot of applications or games that you want to run fast, you don’t want to migrate a bunch of your data to your newer SSD. If you just want a temporary place to store the data you want to keep until you can format the old drive, I guess this is a fine approach, but creating a dedicated user for this is just adding unnecessary complexity, IMHO.

luciferofastora OP ,

You haven’t provided any info about your partition scheme for either drive, but I assume you’ve got your bootloader installed in an EFI partition in the newer drive. You will still have an EFI partition on the old drive created by the Ubuntu installer, so just be sure you know which bootloader you’re using.

Yes, the new drive has a boot partition mounted to /boot/efi, according to the Disks utility.

It’s not clear what issues you’re worried about, but if you’re nervous about breaking the Ubuntu installation[…]

Actually, that’s a good point. I’m expecting to get rid of the installation anyway, so I don’t need to worry about breaking anything there.

It’s not clear to me what the goal of option 3 is

Same as option 2, avoiding breaking a system I’m getting rid of anyway.

Thanks for pointing out the errors in my line of thought!

Luci , to selfhosted in Server Monitoring software recommendations
@Luci@lemmy.ca avatar

I use Check_MK

themoonisacheese , to selfhosted in Server Monitoring software recommendations
@themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works avatar

Can’t really go wrong with the old school nagios+thruk. The learning curve is a tad steep but it teaches you a lot of things about your systems.

TankovayaDiviziya , to showerthoughts in If malls continue to shut down and decay over the next twenty years, someone should turn them into retirement communities for GenX and Millennials.

In other countries, malls are still alive and well. In Philippines, that is where people literally chill in a hot tropical climate because of 24/7 air conditioning!

Malls are also seen as a sign of progress and modernity for many developing countries, so there is some cultural expectations to building and maintaining malls.

AA5B ,

In US, we way overbuilt malls. There’s just too many. While I’m not a fan (shopping is not a destination, and I want to get it done as quickly as possible), I’m not entirely convinced they’re dying here either. Some people do like shopping and some people like the community experience. 3/4 of malls need to die, but we’ll see if it settles on a more sustainable number, or if online shopping ate their face

In the US we’re having a bit of a crisis of “third places”. Where do people hang out as a community? Where do you go? So many newly built suburbs don’t have any approximation of town center or community places. Malls served that need for a few decades, but many are going away. Now we’re trying to replace malls with “shopping districts”, basically rebuilding town centers that too many suburbs never had…. Plus they seem to be just a mall with less roof

JohnOliver , to showerthoughts in If malls continue to shut down and decay over the next twenty years, someone should turn them into retirement communities for GenX and Millennials.

I kind of like having windows where i live although it could be cool to live in a gamestop

ILikeBoobies ,

Live under one of the skylights

moshankey , to science_memes in Hats

Maybe a bowler or a fedora? My thoughts.

Very cute.

perviouslyiner , to noncredibledefense in The more things change the more they stay the same
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