theit8514

joined 2 years ago
[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 1 points 4 hours ago

I bought it personally but I would hardly call it expensive. The three year license is like ~67 USD a year for both CRT and FX.

I love it mainly because it's multi-platform but I wish it had more features. They boast their great integration with VShell but it would be much better if they just had better support for OpenSSH, like being able to push ssh keys to a host.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 23 points 1 day ago

Best news I've heard all day.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 15 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

The fiber we use at our datacenter is quite flexible but still gets damaged if you bend it too far. To roll it like they describe you would still want to have a fairly large drum (probably like 3-4 inches in diameter) which would make it pretty bulky for a small drone.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 7 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Since Stargate is my go-to scifi I'm kinda offended at the "doesn't take itself too seriously". Sure it's not as hard on the science as The Expanse (you know, except for the magic portals to other stars), but it feels like it takes itself pretty seriously. There are obvious bottle episodes that were probably written for other shows and shoe-horned in because they were cheap to buy and produce.

For #2, I think this would get pretty old pretty fast, not to mention that they have to fit everything into runtime constraints. Every new planet the team spends months researching the new language. Sure, you could handwave it (we found a Goa'uld translator just laying around), but that would be back to just one language. Since the Stargate presents an instant transportation rather than the days/months/years of starship travel it would make sense that languages stay fairly consistent as people move from planet to planet.

For #3, they pretty much handwave this in SG-1 as the majority of planets in the Milky Way were repopulated by the ancients in their image, and others were transferred from Earth.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 18 points 2 months ago (9 children)

NoSQL is best used as a key-value storage, where the value can be non-tabular or mixed data. As an example, imaging you have a session cookie value identifying a user. That user might have many different groups, roles, claims, etc. If you wanted to store that data in a RDBMS you would likely need a table for every 1-to-many data point (Session -> SessionRole, Session -> SessionGroup, etc). In NoSQL this would be represented as a single key with a json object that could looks quite different from other Session json objects. If you then need to delete that session it's a single key delete, where in the RDBMS you would have to make sure that delete chained to the downstream tables.

This type of key-value lookups are often very fast and used as a caching layer for complex data calculations as well.

The big downside to this is indexing and querying the data not by the primary key. It would be hard to find all users in a specific group as you would need to scan each key-value. It looks like NoSQL has some indexing capabilities now but when I first used it it did not.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago (2 children)

Sadly, most of the ones I've found are too complicated, and getting all devices to accept the CA is more hassle than it's worth for self hosting. I've given up and just buy my wildcard cert for 60$/yr and just put it on everything.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 12 points 3 months ago

exFAT is an extension of the FAT32 filesystem that allows for larger drive sizes and file sizes and is mostly used on SD cards. Despite the name similarities it has nothing to do with the ext filesystem, and won't support the same features as it (such as symlinks).

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 5 points 3 months ago (1 children)

1000 mbps is the theoretical limit of the line. You will typically lose a little bit for things like TCP overhead.

Link bandwidth (Mbit/s): 1000
Max achievable TCP throughput limited by TCP overhead (Mbit/s): 949.2848
[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago (4 children)

There is a snap package which should be more up-to-date, but I'm not sure I would recommend that for an editor. Compiling from source would be fine, as it will default install into /usr/local and shouldn't affect the existing install. Afterwards you may need to update the link to emacs in your /bin folder (manually or via update alternatives) or add the folder where the new emacs is to your path at the front.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 56 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Found some documentation listing the two middle switches as the rounding switch (up fraction down) and the decimal switch (auto? 0 to 6 then hex?). No idea on the other two.

http://www.calcuseum.com/SCRAPBOOK/BONUS/32853/1.htm

Decimal switch: [A-0-2-3-4-6-F], Round switch: [(ArrowUp)-5/4-(ArrowDown)], Miscellaneous switch: [(Blank)-K .-(Sigma)],

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 3 points 4 months ago

Here's a snapshot of the memory of a running live cd of Ubuntu. I ran a script to load 0123456789abcdef over and over and it's clearly readable. Nothing special is required for this, as the Hypervisor has access to anything that the VM does. If the VM loads the encryption key for your disk into memory it will be available to the provider.

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