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Biden says he’ll sign bill that could ban TikTok if Congress passes it
  • But it would also be replaces by something else equily as shitty. The federal government doesn't move fast enough to block stuff like this by name.

    I has to be something broad, and enforceable. Tic tok has already been doing its thing for like 5 years.

  • How do I use an OpenWRT device as both an extender (for the main router) as well as a firewall + NAT box?
  • Depends if you want to assign IP addresses or not. If you don't, you just want your own section of the same lan, I.e.all your devices connected to your router but let dhcp pass through then you can just set itnup as an extender

  • Asking for a Linux (or non-Windows) laptop during a job interview?
  • I ask before I take the interview. Location, salary range, linux laptop are prerequisites to me working for anyone. If they punt on the laptop question it means no and they are hoping you'll want the job even without. I can promise you I won't, and if you view that as a red flag I can promise I don't want to work there so I don't care.

    If its a hard requirement for you just say that and say that's for workflow and you don't want to waste anyone's time

  • Can ADHD benefit others?
  • I don't know if that's because its expensive or hard to find but don't give your self an out for a perceived excuse. At least work up until you hit and actual bump in the road

  • GNOME 46 is Coming in Hot With These 6 Features
  • I was already full Linux, but gnome is the reason I stopped messing with window managers and maybe large 4k monitors.

    It finally hit enough of 'just works' and customizability to use my standard workflow.

    The only thing I want that I don't have right now is horizontal monitor splits for vertical monitors.

  • Can ADHD benefit others?
  • Absolutely, it seems to me that a larger than normal portion of the IT industry is full of people with ADHD. Especially systems, networking and security type jobs where knowing a little about everything and then being willing to dive deep on something is extremely helpful.

    Large complex systems require large complex knowledge bases to run, and curious people that tend to learn everything about something that catches their attention instead of shrug and walk away as soon as its working endup having diverse skillsets.

    Obviously, you'll still have to learn to moderate it if you want to be employable. But, there's defiantly a world out there where curious people that love to learn a stack of assorted skills and are quick pattern matchers can excell.

    Even better, go find yourself a poorly maintained and managed stack where everything is a fire drill and all the sudden you're in focus mode all the time. Your work queue is just a stack of the most pressing issues and your brain is wired to be energized by the new, unknown and urgent.

    Some people fatigue from being presented a giant unknown issue while someone is standing behind them with a stop watch or, more likely a lost revenue counter. Not you, buddy, that's you're home turf. 'Mean time to recovery' of complex systems that you've never even heard of isajist the score on your favorite game.

    Now, here's a big big caveat. You can't live your life in a healthy way running under stress 100% of the time. And you can't deliver longer term system improvements that solve the stress problem by just banking on stress to fix your executive function. So at a certain point, it starts to be career limiting.

    You'll go from the tech that can figure anything out to the engineer that knows the whole system but can't drive meaningful process improvements and keeps the stack in the same disarray. Your job as you advance is to make to make your massive systems look less like your brain over time.

    And here's the good news. You have a deep catalogue of failure modes in your head. And your gut instinct is going to be right a lot of times as you start to build or replace systems.

    The catch, at this stage is that you'll need to learn how to articulate your years of high pressure undocumented fixes (instincts) into guiding principles you can show to people and explaine why its better.

    You'll have yo learn how to timebox deep exploration, how to finish your full tasks, how to plan and predict the amount of time it takes you to get things done.

    I should do a more detailed writeup at some point. But, let's be honest. . .

    I expect there are many trades like this, some where you can just live in that world where work comes out of a queue and you work until its not an emergency. I bet being an EMT or other type of first responder, would be a good ffromnt I assume a lot of kitchen staff in fast paced restaurants all have it.

    I worked as a tech for years in factories with large machine and convayence systems, more mechanical than computer, same deal.

    I've been a Machinery operator, and that was great, I could hyperfocuse and deliver, good with the machines because your predicting how your actions will affect the thing the machine is operating on. And, if you're interested in the struggle for perfect efficiency with your machine, you can play the game where you try to cut every available motion to only essentials. Did you know if you're loading a truck far away, its still (almost always) faster to return to your pile backwards than to turn twice? You'll know that because you've got the brain capacity to excel at your job while tracking patterns and doing side quests.

    Did you know that roughly 10-15% of the wear that is put on the skid skidsteer tires is unnecessary? That's right, I ran a machine with bike tire odometers on all for tires. If you lift the front tires with the bucket whenever its empty and you turn you can save a considerable amount of rotations on your tires. But do note, that the optimal tire savings is inversely proportional to the replacement time on the front bucket edge, so factor in the surface you're turning on, can this turn be moved from the street to the lawn without slowing total round trip? You'd want a stop watch in your cab for that shit. Can I make a single wide turn instead of a tank to save rubber without slowing down my total speed? Which also brings us back to, can I keep time and just go backwards one way so I never have to turn at all? Hey its 5pm . . .

    ADHD is kinda cool in some ways. No one thinks about that shit the same way you will. What really sucks is the start of your life is the school part, and that is hard all the way around, but when you get out into the real world, there's all sorts of things you can do and probably do better than other people, but you have to learn to work within the constraints your mind gives you.

  • Ways to improve academic standing without going to community college?
  • Well, there's two ways forward, one is that you bite the bullet and get your AA which almost always transfers as most of the first 2 years and you'll be on to most of your degree course work.

    Or, you apply directly college again and you write tour essays on how you've grown as a person. The second one will require some time between being suspended and applying again so I don't know if its an option and that usually requires you have something to show for your about face, I.e. you've worked your way up in some kind ofcareerr for a few years. So that can be a real trick.

    They aren't concerned with if you'll be learning anything while you raise your grades, they are concerned if you are going to put in the effort and stick with it so they don't take an opportunity from someone that actually wants to put in the work.

    It's kinda BS, but also, its adult consequences in an adult world. At the end of the day, you made decisions that make colleges think you need to do some highschool work again so, you're going to have to deal with the consequences, and that includes doing redundant work, both in cc and then to fill in the gaps once you transfer.

  • Hey which genocidal maniac are y'all voting for?
  • Definitely, and what's your thought on the guys from cpac saying they want to end democracy and jan 6th was a good first try?

    Those present and agreeing including members of the last cabinet.

    It's all the same.

  • How to remotely reboot a Linux host if SSH fails to connect?
  • You need an OS app to run and a setting in the BIOS. The app at the OS level gives a heartbeat to the watchdog module on the mother board. If you miss some heartbeats, the firmware on the motherboard sends the reset command.

  • How to remotely reboot a Linux host if SSH fails to connect?
  • No, this is a tool that can be used in a well designed architecture. Would I do this with a single database server, probably not. Would I ever run a single database server? Also probably not.

    Also, by this point, you've probably already kernel panicked or something. There's not much left that can be saved and you probably needed that backup five minutes before the host came up.

  • Starting from zero
  • Myrecommendations is probably to host a next cloud instance. Does all the standard 'cloud stuff'. File, contact, calendar sync, plus a bunch if other stuff if you want to add it via plugins. If you're patient, and a single use you can host it on basically anything. If you decide you want to add users or have a faster site, you can go down the route of sorting out faster hardware or better specs and suck.

  • My son uses Arch... How do I know? He tells me... Constantly...
  • Yeah, I that nk a lot of people 'get it' but can't quite explain it. So they tell you they use arch and they they are excited about it.

    I'm a pro, I've used basically every type of Linuxevwr made. Ive built and run linux from wcratch multiole times, as a lewrning experience, a teaching experience and even protypes for production systrms. I understand the packaging philosophies, I understand the opinionated administration decisions. I'm subscribed to most major distro mailing lists and i understand the political motivations that drive various teams to the different technical decisions.

    Arch isn't for everyone. And I'm totally fine with that. But it is perfect for people who want to build something with well crafted and unopinionated tooling. Of everyone 'got' arch they'd be failing at what they ate trying to do.

  • My son uses Arch... How do I know? He tells me... Constantly...
  • I have a roughly 13 year old install that I've moved through the transition to /usr/ and from sysv to systemd. Its my oldest install. I run almost everything except suse as a systems admin.

    As a way to run Linux, I find arch one of the nicest. Rolling release, unmodified packages direct from the dev, unopinionated systems management, arch build system for any packages you want to compile, arch Linux archive that can be used for snapshotting or locking your rolling release, and AUR.

    It's a completely different way to manage and build an OS that no one else is really doing. I find team 'I use arch btw' to be extremely annoying but at the end of the day, the arch tooling for building a Linux ypunlike to use means that people are naturally going to want to tell you they built something they find enjoyable to use. That's not really something a lot of people say about most OSs.

    I have a range of issues and annoyances with most major OS, ranging from i cant use this to i wish this worked. Windows, MacOS, Ubuntu/deb flavors, redhat/fedora flavors, openwrt, alpine and other busybox flavors, iOS, Android, Graphine. All have things that mostly work but I'm always working around something.

    And finding accurate documentation for issues on distros that have different configuration release to release is a pain, deb, Ubuntu and redhat flavors are especially egregious. I don't really care how to do this on RH6 or Ubuntu 11, lol, I want docs for the current version.

  • Bluesky is finally open to everyone. But will anyone come? We ask its CEO.
  • Well, every instance has different mix of people interest and moderation. Which maybe I was over thinking it but it took a while to figure out where I wanted to be. And my initial experience wasn't great. My server was way out of date, had caching issues, was slow lots of defederation and perhaps arbitrary blocking that I didn't know was going on so I didn't understand why it didn't work.

    I gave up and came back to a different server and it's been good since. But, no one is switching from threads or Instagram for that experience. Or at least going to stick with it long enough to find a home.

  • My Favorite Pair (Seiko Speed timers)

    I love the 6139s, I have a couple others in the black and silver but these two are my favorites. So simple and that hard click on start stop from the Chrono is my favorite.

    0
    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/)PE
    The_Pete @lemmy.world
    Posts 1
    Comments 78