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tinwhiskers , in Do you use an antivirus? Why, or why not?
@tinwhiskers@kbin.social avatar

No. I only use Android as my PC via AR glasses. Is there even any antivirus software for Android? Probably, but I don't care I guess. Never had a problem.

ramble81 , in Slackware turns 30 today

Ah Slackware, the first time that I learned software could damage hardware. It has the option to also configure hsync on your CRT monitor, and if said monitor didn’t correctly validate the range it would permanently fuck it up.

5lq2y ,

Oh man, I completely forgot this happening to me lol.

bhez ,

I learned that lesson as a 12 year old in the early 90’s on an original IBM PC 5150 with a 5151 monochrome monitor, fucking with TSR’s in DOS 3.1. It must’ve made the graphics card change timing modes and the monitor immediately blew a fuse. My dad then soldered in a fuseholder so the fuse in the monitor can be replaces as needed.

Out of fear of doing further damage, I did stay away from the particular TSRs that had any relation to changing video timing modes and it didn’t happen again.

xordos ,

Haha, TSR, man, good old memories… Is there a famous TSR called sidekick? Chain of CD 09H… :)

eek2121 ,

Definitely a hardware issue, not a software one.

tool ,
@tool@r.rosettast0ned.com avatar

So I’m not the only one who fried a monitor trying to get X11 working…

_calm_bomb_ ,
@_calm_bomb_@lemmy.ml avatar

Oh no, for sure! I did it with Debian in '98-99.

tool ,
@tool@r.rosettast0ned.com avatar

That certainly makes me feel better for letting the Magic Smoke out.

yak ,
@yak@feddit.it avatar

Really? I didn’t know it was possible. How’s that happened?

PorkrollPosadist ,
@PorkrollPosadist@lemmy.ml avatar

X11 used to require very cumbersome MANUAL configuration, where you would specify the exact parameters of your keyboard, mouse, monitor, and other peripherals. If you accidentally ended up overclocking your monitor it would melt. For at least a decade, it has been able to run with no configuration file at all, but in the 90s/early 2000s you had to produce a unique >75 line xorg.conf file for your specific hardware.

yak ,
@yak@feddit.it avatar

Thanks, that’s terrifying and I’m glad that I never had to do it

hardaysknight ,

God that brings back memories

ch1cken , (edited ) in Do you use an antivirus? Why, or why not?

deleted_by_author

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  • phx ,

    You can also do fun stuff like running the app as a separate user, and using sudo+xhost to access it. Most Linux firewalls allow you to set a rule with uid-affinity, so you could restrict the additional user to a whitelist of IP’s.

    Krtek , in Was Fedora always so unstable?

    Also on AMD APU hardware, I was a while on Kubuntu with 5.15 as 5.16 and 5.17 had pretty frequent regressions regarding s0ix, but it was fine afterwards. Until now, though 6.3.12 seems to be somewhat stable again

    bizdelnick , in Was Fedora always so unstable?

    Yes.

    Fedora is the new Ubuntu

    Fedora is older than Ubuntu.

    Junkdata , in Slackware turns 30 today

    I remember this from mastadon when i was searching slackware hashtag. Nice, congrats Slackware!

    darvocet , in Slackware turns 30 today

    First distro for me as well.

    const_void , in Slackware turns 30 today

    First distro I ever used. Downloaded it from a BBS onto about 40 floppies. Fun times.

    InverseParallax ,

    Same, same, still remember the install process, and how hard it was to get x11 working, plus how you ended up with twm after.

    And of course having to reboot to escape vim.

    tool ,
    @tool@r.rosettast0ned.com avatar

    and how hard it was to get x11 working

    Oh good God. If you really want to test someone’s resolve, sit them down at an old computer with a CRT and no Internet and have them configure X11 from scratch. Seeing that default X11 crosshatch background for the first time was practically orgasmic after the bullshit I went through to make it work.

    That’s one of those traumatizing experiences I’d completely blocked from my memory until I read your comment.

    Traumatizing experience #2 that just came back to me was getting a winmodem working and connected to my ISP via minicom.

    InverseParallax ,

    Didn’t do winmodems, that would be a nightmare.

    I can’t remember how long it was until xf86config made things slightly easier, yeah, getting modelines at first was basically impossible, I think it was trial and error for hours at least.

    tool ,
    @tool@r.rosettast0ned.com avatar

    I don’t think it became easier at all until it was forked off into Xorg and they started making dramatic improvements.

    I think it was trial and error for hours at least.

    It certainly was until I discovered the monitor I hadn’t fried had the modelines printed on a sticker on the back…

    InverseParallax ,

    You are so damn lucky. I just took the safe ones, and pushed them until it looked good but the monitor’s whine wasn’t too scary.

    Fucking dark ages…

    Xorg was a massive improvement, still bad, but less insane.

    Corngood ,

    I was just going to post the same thing. I actually split downloading duties with a friend of mine when we both had 1 (or maybe 2?) hr / day on our ISPs.

    We even used coloured floppies to colour code the package sets.

    LeFantome ,

    I used to go into the Sun lab at my university to download floppy images to take home. Good times.

    I remember copying the window manager config files from the Sun workstations and using it on my home computer ( still a 486 if I recall ). What a rush it was just to seeing the screen look the same as those super expensive machines.

    fmstrat ,

    Ahhh Sun labs. Are there Linux labs now?

    kale ,

    Technically second distro I ever installed, but the first one I actually used. I purchased Mandrake when it was based on RedHat, but didn’t get very far with it. In college I inherited always on Internet in my dorm and ran a Slackware webserver, and later fileserver and BitTorrent machine. I tried running Slackware on my laptop but I couldn’t get the battery management to work, but I dual booted for a couple of years.

    HughJanus , in Do you use an antivirus? Why, or why not?

    Most modern antivirus software is a virus in and of itself.

    thejml ,

    We always say that McAfee uses all the system resources so the virus doesn’t have anything to work with.

    At home I have MS defender turned on by default on my windows machine. I was copying the contents of one nvme to another the other day and noticed I was only getting 60MiB/sec. I looked at task manager, realized why, turned off proactive scanning of files, and watched it jump to over 2GiB/sec. Really nailed that point home.

    CookieJarObserver , in Slackware turns 30 today
    @CookieJarObserver@sh.itjust.works avatar

    🫡

    Happy 30th! Now you can legally call the distro oldtimer in Germany.

    0x4E4F , in Do you use an antivirus? Why, or why not?
    @0x4E4F@lemmy.rollenspiel.monster avatar

    Nope, nothing. I use ESET Endpoint on Windows though.

    knobbysideup , in Do you use an antivirus? Why, or why not?

    Antivirus is a technical attempt at solving a stupid user problem. It does not actually prevent any problems and causes many of its own.

    • run only what you need
    • get what you need only from trusted sources
    • keep what you need up to date
    • configure what you need conservatively
    • admin/root account only for admin stuff. Don’t use root as your general login.
    angrymouse ,

    Frankly, some phishing attempts, especially at work, are pretty good in my opinion.

    BaalInvoker , in Do you use an antivirus? Why, or why not?

    No. Because there is no need.

    Antivirus just make people more negligent even in Windows.

    nothendev , in Distro hoppers, how do you manage your config files?

    Home manager fan here. Every install I tweak something if I feel like it.

    maengooen , in Do you use an antivirus? Why, or why not?

    I usually haven’t, but I installed Clam about a month ago on my desktop, ran a full and complete scan, then left it running scheduled scans. Hasn’t found anything, and I get a lot of software from outside of my package manager, and use wine for a lot of it, so I’d say my risk/exposure is higher than most.

    I think it’s fine to go without AV on a linux desktop, but I like the peace of mind. There will definitely be more things targeting linux sytems as/if more market share is acquired, but in terms of security it’s more important that you harden the system than run an AV.

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