“good morning, I’m about to destroy the backend” is exactly the energy I’d welcome from a colleague frankly.
I think the outage that followed as we fumbled to replace it would probably be cheaper than the ongoing maintenance after a few months
“good morning, I’m about to destroy the backend” is exactly the energy I’d welcome from a colleague frankly.
I think the outage that followed as we fumbled to replace it would probably be cheaper than the ongoing maintenance after a few months


Something geared towards finding out what they do in their free time. Generally a quick way to find stuff in common


If Ryanair doesn’t like what you’re doing, you’re on the right path


Nu-metal & Nu-rave purely to see what they call it


but I figured, why not? And left my likeness open to everyone, just like Sam Altman.
Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.
Honestly about as bright as posting your credit card details on social media.
Privacy is something you can’t really get back once you give it away. Your likeness is just another part of that


when they’ll finally take the power
This has still not happened.
Boomers are still a massively oversized voting demographic, so vast quantities of political energy are still spent on them.
They’re also typically more susceptible to modern propaganda techniques than any subsequent demographic.
The bulk of modern propaganda is trying to stop people from seeing and tackling the issues causing the problems. If people get angry at immigrants, they’ll not point their fingers at the ultra-wealthy who are actually causing all the issues pricing them out of living their lives.
The people in power are predominantly boomers and gen-Xers with views that align with boomers. There’re practically no millennials in any position of meaningful power across most of the world’s politics. The more radical gen-Xers were never let into the establishment parties, so they languished in the political cold unable to get enough votes under FPTP based systems.
No one can really change shit until the generations go back to being roughly the same size as each other. Hopefully it’s not too late to fix things by that point.


Not necessary preppers as that is someone who’s motivation is to mitigate some hypothetical future bad thing happening
I think most self-hosters are doing it out of a combination of technical exploration and mitigating real issues that exist today, e.g. cloud service outages or market exits causing something previously bought to be useful to become a temporary brick or permanent e-waste. Well, and cost in some cases, no one particularly enjoys having an extra bill for hosting.


This is kinda cope
Practically everyone’s job is going to be automated away before long, the important thing is that production is socialised before practically 1 guy owns everything and has to pay no one.
At that point things end up pretty concrete.
These opinion pieces that pop up saying “ha-HA! Behold the petard they’re hoisting themselves with!” Kinda miss the importance of preparation.
They falsely expect an easing to an exponential curve.
The cat leapt out of the bag decades ago, we all need to make sure we’ve got something left at the end of it all


I mean, this sounds like a pretty huge deal
Does anyone who knows this field better than me, know if this is as big as it sounds?
Probably 100-200km on foot, I try to get 10,000 steps a day, but don’t always hit it
I probably go into the office 5 times a month and that’s about 10km each way, though I’ll mix up either using tram or taxi depending how late I am. So let’s say 60km on tram, 40km in a cab
Probably do the same kind of split for leisure travel locally, though the cabs are more for late nights or areas not near a tram stop, so say another 60km & 40km.
I probably travel across the country by train about 6 times a year to visit family and friends in near London, so that’s 2x 3km cabs to the station (the tram doesn’t go there yet) and 2x 350km of train travel. So half that for a monthly average amount, 3km taxi, 350km train. Probably add another 50km of trains monthly just for random domestic travel not to visit my family.
Journeys involving flights probably more like 3 a year, usually to somewhere in Europe, 2x 8km taxi to and from the airport, let’s just say 2x 1000km as that puts me in the middle of Europe. So quarter that for average monthly and 4km cab, 500km plane.
Average monthly totals:
=~1260km a month
I don’t drive my own car and this is a reminder that I need to finally get my bike fixed. But hey, had no idea I was moving around so much.


Of course the, now owned by the daily mail group, i uses a sensationalist headline to imply that the ID will be required for this
Rather than another option for people who have to carry a physical ID for age check purposes already


60 years takes us to 1965, hmm
Strong urge to just play “Venetian Snares - a lot of drugs” or “Aphex Twin - Ventolin” to someone and try to convince them that’s what everyone listens to in the future. But I can’t quite figure out who would give me the best reaction, maybe someone like Elvis
Playing something like “deadmau5 - Strobe” or basically anything from Chemical Brothers to people like Bob Moog or Don Buchla, would be a cool experience. Tbh they’d probably love a bit of Aphex


I vaguely remember getting into a WPA network (that I owned!) using kismet about 15 years ago with relative ease, but I’m struggling to remember details about that process.
I also remember reading that WPA2 non-enterprise was broken a while ago, however I just looked into it and both of the main exploits I can find were patchable (and have been patched) at client OS level (They were the KRACK and FragAttacks). Seems like there has already been something found wrong with WPA3 too that’s also been addressed.
So yeah as you say back to brute forcing for the most part. Forcing reconnects was a pretty easy way to get more handshakes to record back when I last tried, so I assume that still has decent levels of success, given the prevalence of mesh networks. Looking further it seems people use a tool called hashcat today to get pretty rapid results doing the actual brute forcing using a modern GPU.
But yes very good advice all in all, long passwords and the highest WPA version you can get away with are going to make an attackers job harder.
Thanks for the reply, you got me to go back down an interesting rabbit hole I’ve not looked at in a while


Worth highlighting WiFi blasts all your data in all directions, and unless you’re using enterprise/WPA3 encryption with a strong password, someone determined enough can break in.
If someone wanted to they could park near your house and run aircrack (or whatever the modern suite is called) without you ever knowing. FWIW this is why it’s good to set up a way of getting notified about new devices on your network (most modern non-ISP routers support a way of doing this)
Conversely, I believe most ethernet NICs discard any packet not intended for it at hardware level, they’re super optimised for speed, it would be much slower to leave that for software. I’m not 100% if that’s universal however, so I’d try and double check that


Yet the flag shaggers last month, who deliberately seek to intimidate and terrify many British people based on legally protected characteristics, only had a few arrested for literally brawling with the police.


Peculiar no one has mentioned the music specific *arr


The billionaire one is kinda easy
Sports betting to get your base funds up to a decent level then buy the shares in the successful tech companies post dot-com crash. Wouldn’t hurt to buy some gold and bitcoin too.
Sports betting would continue helping you live a lavish lifestyle until all the investment income gets to a good level.
If you do well enough, you should be able to amplify what you’ve already made to acquire an absurd amount of wealth on the subprime mortgage crash in 2008.


If you want to do it legally, pretty much internet radio is what’s left given that list. Though you seem to have missed Deezer from your list, I think they have a free tier, so that’s worth a look.
Oh also SoundCloud depending what kind of thing you listen to.
Illegally, the world is your oyster
Nope sadly, AI needs GPUs and it makes up the bulk of sales of these chips now.
It would be suicide for any of the companies that could make these processors to not go after the biggest market. The result of a company not doing that would be watching all their competitors grow and advance their products whilst their company’s value drops and products stagnate, possibly to a point that recovery to competitiveness would be hard if not impossible.
A stylophone is more of a toy than an instrument, really
If you want a small synth that you’ll actually be able to use to make music and learn, I’d say look into the Korg Volca series. They’re only around twice the price of the stylophone, and are much more powerful in terms of what they’re capable of.
There’s about 10 of them now and are very affordable for what they are, which is a combination sequencer and synth. They can also be connected together to sync up, so you could have one doing drums and another doing a bassline or something.
Look into YouTube videos about them and decide which you think would best help you make the kind of music you’re looking to make.