Sabrina Carpenter 💅
mlfh
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- 14 Comments
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is the best lemmy/piefed instance, in your opinion?English
3·11 days agoIt might yet come back, the page has a banner saying they ran out of storage and the community has donated a bit to add more.
I spun up my own server in the meantime though, and even if sdf does come back, I’ll probably stick to using this one as my primary.
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is the best lemmy/piefed instance, in your opinion?English
3·11 days agoI love lemmy.sdf.org the best - it’s a unixy ragtag underdog cyberpunk kind of place running on a pubnix cluster, whose frequent downtime only adds to its charm. Three-character dot-org domain name (aura). Broad spectrum of users, unified by finding something like a pubnix cluster cool.
Usually the downtime lasts a day or two at most, the plucky pubnix admins get it back online and we celebrate. But it’s been down for over a month now :(
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•If you had to track someone, what tech would you use?English
2·12 days agoThis comment sent me down a fun rabbit hole learning about ARPS and packet radio, and I’m finally gonna get my license now. Thanks!
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Zpool scrub taking days? And HDD issues... Am I cooked?English
19·13 days agoYou have enough failures on each disk to make me suspect an issue with the usb-connected drive bay. I ran into similar issues with a cheap pci-e sata adapter, where little hiccups and latency in the communication layer would cause zfs to take disks offline randomly. Read, write, and checksum errors would slowly accumulate across all of the disks. Switched that machine to a proper enterprise hba, the issues vanished, and the disks are all healthy 3-4 years later.
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Linux@lemmy.world•The Islamic Cyber Resistance in Iraq – 313 Team is currently DDoSing Ubuntu and archivesEnglish
10·17 days agoIslamic cyber resistance to what, snaps?
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Which computer-related belief do you hold without any foundation?English
3·19 days agoThat’s a really really good story idea, and I love the thought and sentiment behind it - even with my own way of looking at machines, I’d never thought of things that way. You should write it!
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Which computer-related belief do you hold without any foundation?English
9·19 days agoI (mostly jokingly, but also a little bit really and sentimentally) believe that physical baremetal computers/servers have souls, and must therefore have hostnames that are names, because names are powerful and soulful and you should have respect for things that have souls. Which is why I kind of hate the “cattle, not pets” model in my own practice.
Stick identifying categorizing prefixes on it, of course, and you can group clusters under the same name with a numeric suffix, but it’s gotta have a real name in there somewhere.
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What's the most moving experience you've ever had?English
3·29 days agoI made it sound a bit like that haha, but no, just the very big loud music
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What's the most moving experience you've ever had?English
14·1 month agoA friend of mine was once the organist at a cathedral with a grand pipe organ. He invited me to see it one day and hear him play, and for the finale he had me climb up into the forest of towering pedal pipes, crouching between the rows, dwarfed by their looming height, while he played Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D Minor.
The sound hit me like a wave, so vast and tremendous and perfect. I felt utterly annihilated - tiny and shaken apart into nothing, a speck swept away in a cascading ocean of music, like the whole world was exploding in cataclysm and fractal rebirth all around me. Dazzling and enormous.
And when the fugue peaked, I think that’s the closest to nirvana I’ve ever been. Just blown clean off the face of the earth.
One fun thing I use it for is semi-automated photo/video backups to my storage servers: a grapheneos storage scope makes the media directory available to termux, and then I have a termux shortcut to run a shell script with a bunch of rsync jobs. Works far more reliably than the godawful nextcloud app, and it’s far more fun to watch.
A partial solution to this evil-maid attack vector is Heads firmware (a replacement for the bios/uefi itself), which lets you sign the contents of your unencrypted boot partition using a gpg key on a hardware token, and verify the integrity of the firmware itself using a totp/hotp key stored in the tpm.
All the benefits of secure boot, but you get to control the signing keys yourself instead of relying on a vendor. It’s great stuff.
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How Do you keep your services updated?English
29·1 month agoEverything I run, I deploy and manage with ansible.
When I’m building out the role/playbook for a new service, I make sure to build in any special upgrade tasks it might have and tag them. When it’s time to run infrastructure-wide updates, I can run my single upgrade playbook and pull in the upgrade tasks for everything everywhere - new packages, container images, git releases, and all the service restart steps to load them.
It’s more work at the beginning to set the role/playbook up properly, but it makes maintaining everything so much nicer (which I think is vital to keep it all fun and manageable).
Where Should We Begin? is a podcast by the psychotherapist Esther Perel, where each episode is a full couple’s therapy session with an anonymous couple. It’s nice, and sounds like a match for your question.