Around '08 or '09 I found Hak5 and was live booting backtrack on my macbook to play with the tools. Was really out of my depth, but hey, it’s easy to get stuff done when you run everything as root ;)
I tend to swipe (on Android btw) whenever I only have one hand available, and type when I have both. It works really well and barely ever comes up with a wrong with.
Slackware 1998. I spent 6 months in a text only freebsd install in 1999. Because of a dram issue I wasn’t able to run windows without blue screens. Text based internet wasn’t that bad in 1999. I could load up xwindows if I wanted to see a picture but rarely did. Talking on irc somebody mentioned memtest and my memory had a very long warranty so I took it back to the store. Then I spent the next several years addicted to quake/quake2
Rsync custom script. I am connecting two different hard disks (1 natively + 1 remotely via ssh) to backup the disk.
1 tine per month, U unplug ny microsd fro my Raspberry Pi 4 Server and I am making a full backup of the sd in case it fails, to restore it to a new sd card.
I’ve been using Restic for a while, and it’s backing up to a Hetzner storage box (1TB).
Restic supports encryption, compression, deduplication, and can forget old backups in a spread out timeline (configurable; e.g. save one yearly, three monthly and 7 daily).
On top of this I also use healthchecks.io to make sure all backups are working.
I’m taking a second stab at House of Leaves. I got about halfway through a few years ago and then my life went nuts and I forgot about it. I’m enjoying it, but definitely getting through a lot more slowly than other books I’ve read recently.
First was Corel Linux, boxed, from Circuit City, on a dodgy Pentium hand-me-down. Then Gentoo on a second-hand HP laptop in college. Distro hopped a lot alongside Windows in the subsequent years. Now Arch (btw), for about a decade.
kbin.life
Top