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sopuli.xyz

inetknght , to linux in When I shutdown my computer last night, it gave me this error message. It seems to be working fine but should I be considered?

Attempting to kill init means that something tried to kill PID 1. That’s… abnormal outside of a shutdown. But it can be normal during shutdown. So uhh… yeah: if it continues to be a problem then it needs to be reported and fixed by your distribution. What distribution are you using?

I see kernel panics at shutdown most often on Arch-based distros after updating system packages.

It sucks when it happens during shutdown but it’s typically not going to cause other problems… except perhaps not automatically booting if you wanted to reboot instead of shutdown.

vortexal OP ,
@vortexal@sopuli.xyz avatar

I’m using the XFCE edition of Linux Mint. The Kernel updated yesterday morning, could that have something to do with it?

inetknght ,

A kernel update, if it’s done right, shouldn’t cause a panic. But not every distro does updates right.

If you know the old version and the new version then it might be useful to reach out to the Mint community and see if they’re aware of issues like that.

linuxmint.com/getinvolved.php -> forums or chat might be fruitful to you

vortexal OP ,
@vortexal@sopuli.xyz avatar

I don’t know what the previous version was but I’ll still post about it to the forums. Thanks.

qjkxbmwvz ,

I see kernel panics at shutdown most often on Arch-based distros after updating system packages.

When I tried Arch, upgrading kernel would delete the kernel modules of the running kernel — somewhat unimpressive upgrade process.

superkret ,

As with everything in Arch, there’s a setting for that.

30p87 ,

on Arch-based distros after updating system packages

So basically every shutdown lol

spaghetti_carbanana ,

This dude kernel panics

PetDinosaurs , to programmerhumor in Living the dream

A large faction of engineers, especially software-type engineers, have these types of hobbies.

I’m sitting here right beside the heirloom quality (compared to most furniture) coffee table I made in my garage with my nearly complete wood shop.

I make stuff in two ways in my day job. I design something and someone else makes it, or it’s just some idea as software.

Engineers are a type. We’re just wired differently from most other people.

grue ,

So. Many. DIYer/maker/woodworker/machinist/car mechanic/etc. Youtubers are former engineers, especially software engineers.

PetDinosaurs ,

Agreed.

I might also argue that those people are all still engineers.

Engineer just means “problem solver”. Everyone gets paid for solving problems.

The real question in my head is how far does this go?

Sometimes the problem is that these burgers need flipping. Protein disk translocation engineers? I’m cool with that.

entropicdrift ,
@entropicdrift@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I’d argue that engineering, like science, is a mindset. If science asks “what” things are, engineering asks “how” to do things

PetDinosaurs ,

A more standard definition in my tenure in academia is that scientists solve problems because they want to know the answer. Engineers solve problems because they want the problem to be solved.

In any case, the difference is just, heh, academic.

I’m very much the latter.

bastian_5 , to lemmyshitpost in new adaptor just dropped

How else did you think they got the dialup noises to play?

Mr_Dr_Oink ,

Thats wrong. This is how they got dial up to play

youtu.be/AgqEIp2YmtE

Psythik , (edited )

Dialup didn’t use ethernet.

bastian_5 ,

Care to elaborate? I can’t find any information searching online.

Psythik ,

No.

havokdj ,

Ethernet is rj-45, dialup used 11/25

biofaust , to mildlyinfuriating in Unfortunate post placement

Why unfortunate? They match quite well if you ask me.

Xantar ,

Depicts our dystopian times to perfection.

alvvayson ,

Unfortunate reality, but headline placement is quite OK.

spaghettiwestern , to technology in Fully working 270€ Nest Dropcam will no longer be supported.

Just returned 2 Eufy cameras because the company claims ownership of my video streams and won’t allow me access to those streams. Their website conveniently hides the fact that almost all of their cameras are locked to their base station or their cloud, and makes it look like the streams are readily accessible. Ultimately that means Eufy can pull the plug at any time.

Many people got wise to the printer ink racket, they’ll eventually figure out these cloud services are to be avoided too.

deegeese ,

I got burned by MyQ garage doors and JuiceBox EV chargers doing a rug pull on their cloud platform.

Never buying another piece of smart home gear that doesn’t give full local control.

ashok36 ,

Look into ratgdo if your willing to DIY. Konnected is just about to release a version of the same. More costly but konnected actually has customer service.

deegeese ,

RATGDO is great.

mosiacmango ,

Opengarage is also great. You just wire it into the same ports as your garage door button and you can then connect to it via its wifi app or home assistant. Works like a champ for $50.

Same folks that did opensprinkler.

FrostyCaveman , to memes in Think we should intervene?

Takes me back to those Annoying Jesus memes

hydroptic OP ,
GiveOver ,
ICastFist ,
@ICastFist@programming.dev avatar
Schmuppes ,
FlyingSquid ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar
HurlingDurling ,

I think you misspelled Awesome Jesus Memes

Etterra ,

That crazy Jesus is always stealing my heroin!

coco , to programmerhumor in In case of cyberattack

Uh no

Go to the main breaker that feed the servers whatever. And pull the 600v switch off

The smartest layout for that situation is having the main breaker box close to the hooman IT operator room

No choice if it is very serious breach

gazter ,

Depending on where the breaker is relative to the UPS, of course.

JuxtaposedJaguar ,

I vaguely remember the advice actually being to leave it running but disconnect it from the internet. Although maybe hard disconnect the backups if you can.

Gestrid ,

And probably the intranet, too, just to be safe.

Trainguyrom ,

The advice I’ve always heard is disconnect network but leave powered for forensics/recovery. Some ransomware store the decryption key soley in memory, so it is lost upon power loss

Haui ,
@Haui@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

That actually makes sense. We had a ransomware attack once. We also disconnected the device but I cant remember if we powered it off. At the time it stopped encrypting due to that since our network drives were not reachable anymore.

Is there actually a way to spread the encryption process to a server?

coco ,

Im not a it expert at alll. But reallly ?

Trainguyrom ,

Best I understand the encryption key is needed to encrypt and decrypt, so if the malware isn’t written well enough it may well continue to store the encryption key in memory.

There’s some old malware on archive.org that just pulls the FAT off the filesystem into memory and offers a dice roll to restore it

Chunk ,

Nah. Rip that shit right out of the chassis. Destroy that RJ45 port. Make it so the security audit team has to resolder a jack to the mobo before they can even ssh to the box.

Trust me I run a security company. If you need help with your security please feel free to contact me! We are the best in the business!

Confused_Emus ,

Y’all… just… unhook the cable from the demarc…?

coco ,

Yea but it take time !!!

How many shit you have to unhook from whatever to save the shit ?? 100 ?? That take minutes !!!

darcy ,
@darcy@sh.itjust.works avatar

just have a tub of water rigged above the server

Carighan ,
@Carighan@lemmy.world avatar

No, have a Safety Control Rod Axe Man. The dropping rod hits the breakers and smashes it, cutting power!

RizzRustbolt ,

Should be a trunk line disconnect switch that kills both power and data. And if your manager is cool, then it’s a guillotine switch.

Tygr , to retrogaming in Showing the destination before the journey - Dragon Warrior

Thanks Nintendo Power for this free game for subscribing. I must have played through 10+ times as a kid and a few times as an adult. One of my favorite games.

WintLizard OP ,
@WintLizard@sopuli.xyz avatar

I found it at a retro store when I was in college. I was collecting NES games at the time and would buy anything with “dragon” in the name. Definitely worth the price, though getting it for free sounds great!

turbodrooler ,

I remember the ad. I had no idea what a “Game Pak” was so I never took advantage of the offer. Seemed too good to be true if that meant an actual game.

quirzle ,
@quirzle@kbin.social avatar

Same. That weird free game started a lifelong appreciation for the genre.

sik0fewl ,

My best friend had it. We spent a lot of time playing it! Also Zelda and Zelda II. Dragon Warrior was always my favorite, though.

CeruleanRuin ,

That’s how I got mine too! I had forgotten all about that fact until now.

HeapOfDogs ,

This is how I got it. The only issue is I didn’t really understand how I was supposed to play the game so I would just run randomly about and die. Never made any progress but I remember it fondly.

Tygr ,

This map and the guide all came in Nintendo Power.

KairuByte , to programmerhumor in A classic
@KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I’m usually the one managing merge conflicts, and honestly that’s how I’d prefer it. I’ve had so many instances where my code was bungled because someone didn’t take the time to actually check the conflicts.

Korne127 ,
@Korne127@lemmy.world avatar

Best thing is to add tests if possible to make sure your code doesn’t lose the added functionality.

Anticorp ,

What is this, the billionaires club? Ain’t nobody got time for tests!

zkfcfbzr , to nostupidquestions in What kind of light is this and is there a lightbulb based on it?
ciko22i3 OP ,
@ciko22i3@sopuli.xyz avatar

I watched that video when it came out but i guess i forgot about it haha

glimse ,

I knew it was gonna be TC before even clicking. That guy makes amazing content.

“Did you ever wonder how [common device] works?”

“Nope, never!”

“Well here’s how it works, why it works this way, and the history of [common device]”

“Amazing!”

boringbisexual ,

I love that guy!

glimse ,

He’s great. Never been disappointed when a new video hits my feed!

ItsaB3AR ,

Watched this last night and it came to mind immediately.

c0mbatbag3l ,
@c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world avatar

If you didn’t link the Tech Connections video I was going to lol

samus12345 , to funny in Careful what you wish for
@samus12345@lemmy.world avatar
originalucifer , to fediverse in The countries with the most Fediverse servers are rich and former/current colonial powers. One of the best true barometers of the success of the Fediverse is how quickly we can turn that on its head.
@originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com avatar

its about mature infrastructure.

small, less mature countries have shit for internet resources.

supersquirrel OP ,

What do you mean in as precise of terms as you are capable of by the term “mature” in this context?

I think the answer to that question is similar to the answer to my original question.

originalucifer ,
@originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com avatar

a mature infrastructure.. redundant fiber optic/satellite connectivity to Tier 1 providers, power generation and reliability, etc.

basic shit

supersquirrel OP , (edited )

In terms of internet infrastructure, I think the biggest opportunities here are local grassroots municipal/community government spearheaded build outs of high speed internet that completely bypass the concept of the western business and foreign aid structure that involves pulling in some for profit or “”“non-profit”“”" company with a complex set of incentives that mostly don’t align with the communities they are ostensibly there to help build infrastructure for.

I suspect how effective or ineffective globally this method of funding internet infrastructure development is will have a major impact on the long term future of the fediverse as a whole… since it isn’t within the borders of colonial powers where the inherent freedoms to the internet will be defended. It will ultimately be the “periphery” states and states far beyond the borders of colonial powers that shore up safe heavens for internet communities. Seeing where the US is going, I can only hope that my country will not block my access to those communities down the road…

TseseJuer ,

satellite connectivity LOL

onlinepersona ,

I worked with and still know people living in Africa, let me tell you, if you think you have bad, expensive internet, go back a decade or two. The people I know work in tech companies or are otherwise somewhat affluent and even they struggle getting a stable internet connection to have a video call. An office building of an ex-coworker had a single 20Mbit line with multiple companies inside.
The people I know have to make due with 1-2Mbit home lines. The cell connections are better, but only marginally.

A former employer even worked with the governments of some African countries and they couldn’t get a datacenter up and running. People were stealing the bricks and wires! The government was trying to move their infrastructure away from the previous colonizers and back home, but their own countrymen and women didn’t understand the importance.

Also, it’s not only internet infrastructure, but infrastructure in general is messed up there. South Africa is one of the wealthiest countries in Africa and has (had?) to content with rolling blackouts for years! Service operators struggle to keep their services running and have to move them abroad, which of course isn’t great.

The reasons are diverse, but a large factor by far is corruption. Physical colonization with non-native governments are a thing of the past. What’s trendy now is economic and legal colonization. Pay off as many people as possible to make laws (and also keep it that way) allowing all the riches (labor and resources) to be extracted from the country at laughable prices - which end up in the pockets of the wealthy and corrupt. Anybody who doesn’t fall in line is merc’ed.
Boeing killed off a whistleblower or two and the government exiled another? That’s cute! Politicians get shot while campaigning for a better future. The press isn’t free, and fair voting circumstances are a dream. Controlling parties can own the voting booths and reward voters in broad daylight for checking the “right” box.

Anyway, while I do support the thought behind asking the question, IMO the only ways to expand the fediverse into ex-colonies are:

  • making the fediverse so popular that it’s “so hot right now” and the trend swaps over
  • paying a trusted party to set up a server there and pay for everything (including bribes) to have a stable connection, then tell as many locals as possible
  • going there, doing it yourself, teaching about it, and handing over the reigns to somebody there with the same vision and passion

That’s of course if the circumstances are right for people there to even want it. Many foreigners have “gone down there” to “show 'em how it’s done” without understanding zilch about their culture, needs, wants, and modus operandi. Only to leave a “white elephant” behind.

Anti Commercial-AI license

supersquirrel OP ,

Anyway, while I do support the thought behind asking the question, IMO the only ways to expand the fediverse into ex-colonies are:


<span style="color:#323232;">making the fediverse so popular that it’s “so hot right now” and the trend swaps over
</span><span style="color:#323232;">paying a trusted party to set up a server there and pay for everything (including bribes) to have a stable connection, then tell as many locals as possible
</span><span style="color:#323232;">going there, doing it yourself, teaching about it, and handing over the reigns to somebody there with the same vision and passion
</span>

That’s of course if the circumstances are right for people there to even want it. Many foreigners have “gone down there” to “show 'em how it’s done” without understanding zilch about their culture, needs, wants, and modus operandi. Only to leave a “white elephant” behind.

There is no set of “only” that can be defined here. There are a million ways to contribute to a momentum in a positive direction here. The biggest is probably contributing labor for translation of documentation into languages that nobody has bothered to translate for yet right? Another is making sure the development community isn’t an opaque discord clique where asking naive questions gets you immediately harassed for not using discord’s awful search function and that somebody from a very different life experience, culture and language can hack together what your documentation means even if they can’t speak your language.

I think there are as many solutions to this power imbalance as there are dimensions of the power imbalance.

onlinepersona ,

Yeah, you’re probably right. I was thinking in terms of “fediverse is popular in ex-colonies now!” level. But small steps first. Getting off of goddamn discord is definitely one.

Supporting other languages in the dev community is hard though. In my mind it kinda creates a split in the community, so one would need members that speak both languages well and glue the communities together.

Maybe a good step would be hosting per country instances and trying to promote them on proprietary social media.

Anti Commercial-AI license

supersquirrel OP , (edited )

Supporting other languages in the dev community is hard though. In my mind it kinda creates a split in the community, so one would need members that speak both languages well and glue the communities together.

I think this is a bulk of the hard work that most people in a similar position to me can do (though I only know english and a littttle bit of spanish, but I am referencing my perspective not my life skills). It is hard work, it takes constant people skills and people management. However, I also think the product of that work will undoubtedly have a force multiplication effect on the future growth of the fediverse to more diverse contexts, communities and languages.

As a thought experiment, lets dial this line of thought all the way up to 11. The fediverse would be perfect for hosting say a mastodon instance where all the communication is in a particular endangered language. The community could begin as a place to use an endangered language in conversation, and thus a great place to read and learn the language as well. It could also be a hub for information about classes and events related to the language as well. I believe there is already an Esperanto lemmy community on the fediverse, which is something along vaguely similar lines. Think about it, if somebody with the knowledge, time and skill to set up a lemmy or mastodon instance contacted a teacher conducting classes for an endangered language and offered to set up a community on their lemmy/mastodon server (or help set one up with the intention of handing over control eventually to people in that language community) wouldn’t the result be in many ways simpler from that language teachers perspective than trying to hack something together with commercial software? I think along many metrics it would.

Sure, a companies product for that would be slicker but what about custom character support for languages, what about autocorrect for that language built into the lemmy/mastodon server, what about specific features that are critical to the nature of the language, what about moderation policies that take into account the current and historical experience of the people who kept the language alive? Is a massive corporation run by a bunch of astronomically naive techbros mostly from california really going to care about meaningfully prioritizing implementing features for niche communities like this? …maybe sometimes??

I am disappointed people immediately attacked the details of my question, and focused mostly on the difficulties of constructing any kind of answer that meaningfully predicts the future of an incredibly complex intersection of variables… instead of taking my invitation to think broadly about the future of the fediverse and what the biggest, more direct actions that we can all take to help it grow and become more diverse.

onlinepersona ,

I see where you’re coming from and I like the idea of using the fediverse for endangered languages! Providing a forum (lemmy/mbin), audio platform (funkwhale), video platform (peertube), and short form blogging (mastodon or on of the the others) + long form blogging (wordpress? pleroma? …), could help keep the languages alive through engagement.

Maybe somebody will the find the time for that. I unfortunately am working on other stuff rn.

I am disappointed people immediately attacked the details of my question, and focused mostly on the difficulties of constructing any kind of answer that meaningfully predicts the future of an incredibly complex intersection of variables… instead of taking my invitation to think broadly about the future of the fediverse and what the biggest, more direct actions that we can all take to help it grow and become more diverse.

IMO you should’ve led with the question, then provided context. The context was too long to read to get to the actual question.

Anti Commercial-AI license

supersquirrel OP ,

IMO you should’ve led with the question, then provided context. The context was too long to read to get to the actual question.

Hey, thanks for the response and honestly that is a great point. I can’t be upset at people for wanting a sentence to end in a reasonable amount of time lol.

lambalicious ,

small, less mature countries have shit for internet resources.

Isn’t US internet memetically bad (in particular the rural one) compared to a “shit country” like Chile, one of the ones the US got paid to sabotage with military dictatorships?

originalucifer ,
@originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com avatar

no

GamingChairModel ,

Our data centers and backbone internet/Tier 1 internet providers are basically the best in the world. The US Department of Energy maintains a network with 46 Tbit/s connections between its labs.

stanleytweedle , (edited )

Yes but I admire OP’s optimism in challenging the Fediverse to somehow deploy probably the largest and most complex human endeavor ever conceived to quickly achieve economic parity between non and former-colonial powers. That’s like the Principality of Sealand saying they’re putting a man on the moon. I love it.

Sludgeyy , to lemmyshitpost in For my head canon, it doesn't
Riccosuave ,
@Riccosuave@lemmy.world avatar

God damnit, you beat me to the punch 😆 Have an upvote, for it is all I have to give.

Poggervania ,
@Poggervania@kbin.social avatar

Slightly less horrifying than Tusk

FiskFisk33 ,

What’s Tusk?

SinningStromgald ,

A Kevin Smith body horror movie. Yes, Kevin Smith of Clerks and Jay & Silent Bob fame.

spyjoshx , to programmerhumor in Totally logical and expected functionality

Laughs in framework with four identical USB-C ports that can do anything

LastYearsPumpkin ,

That’s actually not true, and framework has similar issues. There was vampire power drains from certain mix and match options with HDMI and USB-C ports.

community.frame.work/t/…/3736

On the AMD framework, the upper right and left USB-C ports are slightly different from the lower ports

community.frame.work/t/…/30771

I love my framework laptop, but we shouldn’t pretend that they are free from quirks that plague other brands.

spyjoshx ,

Fascinating. Good to know…

Skadabucci ,

My Mac book pro from 2019 charges properly on 3 of the 4 USB c ports it has. I have tried everything to get the 4th to work. All other peripherals work on that port. When I first got it, all ports worked. I feel this persona pain.

KISSmyOSFeddit , to programmer_humor in What it's like to be a developer in 2024

Get with the times. When Google isn’t a useful tool anymore, use a different one.
Curate and maintain your own list of links to official documentation.
I think we’re almost at a point where having a library of books next to your workstation would be beneficial again.

Reawake9179 ,

Full circle

iegod ,

Also AI, though I’m sure that’ll be an unpopular suggestion. It really does save time though.

refalo ,

But then how will OP shitpost for imaginary internet points?

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