pleroma.debian.social

Jonathan Dowland | @jmtd@pleroma.debian.social

Principal Software Engineer on #OpenJDK #RedHat. #Debian developer (dormant). Computer Science PhD student. Amateur Computing historian (Computer Science and H/W, esp. Commodore Amiga). Guerilla archivist.

I started installing gitea, opted to apply all the systemd restrictions you can to it then got bored punching the necessary holes for it to actually function

@rivets total agreement there

My old gogs binary is 32M. Gitea is 132M!

@ilmari it's one of the race-names in No Man's Sky. Another is gek, and gek.space is available… for £123.29/year 😲

LLM that predicts frames for the game Doom: you can “play” it

https://gamengen.github.io/

If the LLM started hallucinating it would potentially be really interesting: the rules of engagement you understand as a player breaking down

Could blend well with Doom’s nightmare aesthetic

@rivets can you think of good examples of CS books that have stood the test of time? Knuth’s don’t count since nobody reads them. I think maybe pragmatic programmer, that MS one (code complete?); K&R C; the Steven’s book? Dragon book or surely there’s modern innovations in that space since; design patterns or is that anathema now? SICP

@rivets I find it really hard to consume video content. I keep planning to look at auto screenshot/transcribe services (I posit they exist) but haven’t got around to it. Perhaps a valid application of LLMs! Bonus points if they could skip over sponsored content.

I’d have gone for korvax.space

Happy to discover there’s a Mastodon instance for No Man’s Sky fans! They missed a trick not using the `.space` TLD though https://nomanssky.social/@nmscord

Older pi models seem to be almost given away on eg eBay

I might try this (or Gokrazy) next time I have a raspberry pi appliance use-case https://infosec.exchange/@blitz/113042244233789060

@pwaring urgh my sympathies!

@RogerBW certainly the ratio of decent tech books to crap was very poor. And those that stood the test of time to those which quickly became redundant, perhaps an even worse ratio. (I remember buying a book on Ruby on Rails once, and the very first “hello world” example was broken within a year)

It’s been ages since I’ve been to one of Steve’s Debian BBQs but they’re fantastic fun and the community he’s sustained around them is incredibly welcoming. Corporate beer sponsorship! https://blog.einval.com/2024/08/30#2024party

I’m “subtweeting” here and not citing the author (don’t want a pile on or whip lash) but the following I really disagree with:
“30 years ago, learning to program was mostly with books. These days it's hard to read books but YouTube and other platforms are the way to go. 😳”

I got a surprise surgery today (today was the surprise, not the surgery); hopefully my last for a long while. Just recovering from the anaesthetic now. Like a hangover with no upsides. (Or maybe a hangunder: perhaps tomorrow will be a blast)

@jwildeboer @lobingera for real guarantee that a rip is good, imho one needs to compare against AccurateRip. Drive tricks improve assurance but offer no guarantees. On macOS, iirc, “xld” is a ripper which supports AccurateRip.

@grifferz @alexhudson this, combined with the recent kerfuffle on lkml about inappropriate patches in the freeze cycle, are really disappointing

So: I've left nginx as Internet-facing, purely reverse proxy; lighttpd was doing some private CGI stuff so I've reconfigured it to be LAN only. Apache it seems was superfluous (pulled in via smokeping, I've since added that to lighttpd)

@mart_brooks that was what motivated me to move my personal stuff to lighttpd 10 years or so ago: In particular the relative ease of configuring fcgi

»