hazard of our modern world: devices that pretend to be a simple machine with one job and are actually computers with firmware and the firmware was written by whacking the keyboard with dildos
@SF_Photographer
Hugin has a mode to blend HDR pictures. It takes some practice, but if you get it right, the results are amazing.
Hugin has a mode to blend HDR pictures. It takes some practice, but if you get it right, the results are amazing.
@foone
Cursed
Cursed
@zhenech
Well, ED25519 isn't NIST, so that would make sense (no point in having a security standard if you're going to allow using algorithms that aren't part of said standard).
I suspect using ECDSA with one of the NIST curves works? P-384 is pretty good too, and not suspect like Dual_EC_DRBG always was, even before Snowden confirmed it was compromised.
@cloonix
Well, ED25519 isn't NIST, so that would make sense (no point in having a security standard if you're going to allow using algorithms that aren't part of said standard).
I suspect using ECDSA with one of the NIST curves works? P-384 is pretty good too, and not suspect like Dual_EC_DRBG always was, even before Snowden confirmed it was compromised.
@cloonix
@cks @scuttlebutt I don't think you're wrong, that's my experience too.
@mirabilos @scuttlebutt The more modern ones do speak 4G. The difference between 4G and 5G is data bandwidth, which for a dumbphone is only relevant if you want to turn it into a mobile hotspot (but then you can buy a device specifically for that). For phone calls, a 4G dumbphone should be good for years to come.
Of course that doesn't answer the reliability, but then that's probably just another case of planned obsolescence, not much I can help with that...
Of course that doesn't answer the reliability, but then that's probably just another case of planned obsolescence, not much I can help with that...
@mirabilos
They do still make dumbphones. It takes a bit of looking, but they're there.
https://www.bestproducts.com/tech/electronics/g60343009/best-dumb-phones/ has a few examples (I have nothing to do with this site, just found it by a simple web search)
@scuttlebutt
They do still make dumbphones. It takes a bit of looking, but they're there.
https://www.bestproducts.com/tech/electronics/g60343009/best-dumb-phones/ has a few examples (I have nothing to do with this site, just found it by a simple web search)
@scuttlebutt
@linuxallday
X11, because awesomewm does not work with Wayland π€·
X11, because awesomewm does not work with Wayland π€·
@disaster2life
Always π
I mean, even if you don't do pepperoni, there's still tomatoes and olives π€·
Always π
I mean, even if you don't do pepperoni, there's still tomatoes and olives π€·
Unpopular opinion:
There is nothing that screams more 'pizza' than pepperoni.
Everything else is just 'I'm trying but I can't quite get there'
There is nothing that screams more 'pizza' than pepperoni.
Everything else is just 'I'm trying but I can't quite get there'
@rrrrroseazerty
Which jurisdiction?
I know someone who wrote a book on that, from Belgium. Dunno whether that's helpful though.
Which jurisdiction?
I know someone who wrote a book on that, from Belgium. Dunno whether that's helpful though.
@aeva
I should add:
Obviously a part of why it only took half a day was because I didn't care about having a smooth, polished experience. I could have spent a lot more time fine tuning the config.
It served its purpose, which was to get a laugh from the guy, and it was 100% functional from the physical CD which we gave him at the goodbye party, but it was a bit rough around the edges. With a few more days I could have fixed that, but there was no point, obviously.
I should add:
Obviously a part of why it only took half a day was because I didn't care about having a smooth, polished experience. I could have spent a lot more time fine tuning the config.
It served its purpose, which was to get a laugh from the guy, and it was 100% functional from the physical CD which we gave him at the goodbye party, but it was a bit rough around the edges. With a few more days I could have fixed that, but there was no point, obviously.
@aeva
Debian has a tool called 'live-build' it's used for creating the official live images and can be configured quite easily for creating custom ones.
I once used it to create a prank 'distribution' as a gift for someone who was leaving a job and which did all the things he had been railing about what we shouldn't do in our software for Linux distributions. Took me half a day to do, most of that was writing the script that it would start at boot time.
Debian has a tool called 'live-build' it's used for creating the official live images and can be configured quite easily for creating custom ones.
I once used it to create a prank 'distribution' as a gift for someone who was leaving a job and which did all the things he had been railing about what we shouldn't do in our software for Linux distributions. Took me half a day to do, most of that was writing the script that it would start at boot time.
re: password manager PSA (keepassxc)
@Ember
OK. I see what you mean. It's a risk, though I don't see it as likely as you seem to think.
IME, reviewing code is faster than writing it from scratch. This applies whether the code is generated or submitted. Whether that happens is the more interesting question, rather than whether LLMs are used, IMO
Corruption bugs are always possible, LLMs may increase the risk but they don't introduce it. You need backups of your vault regardless.
OK. I see what you mean. It's a risk, though I don't see it as likely as you seem to think.
IME, reviewing code is faster than writing it from scratch. This applies whether the code is generated or submitted. Whether that happens is the more interesting question, rather than whether LLMs are used, IMO
Corruption bugs are always possible, LLMs may increase the risk but they don't introduce it. You need backups of your vault regardless.