(Justin)
Tech nerd from Sweden
Intel a310 is the best $/perf transcoding card, but if P40 supports nvenc, it might work for both transcode and stable diffusion.
Bluesky has opt-in federation with the fediverse: https://techcrunch.com/2024/06/05/bluesky-and-mastodon-users-can-now-talk-to-each-other-with-bridgy-fed/
Adventures in bad sociology, fascism, and gender/neurological chauvinism with our favorite billionaire.
I’m just pointing out the nuance. Broad brush doesn’t help anyone. If you automatically assume everyone from lemmy.ml is a tankie, even though it’s one of the largest instances, and the original Lemmy instance, then you’re doing yourself and all the more moderate users on lemmy.ml a disservice.
I’m very much not minimizing the shittiness of worldnews@lemmy.ml.
Yeah, that’s what I mean, the admins aren’t forcing their ideas on people, it’s just the mods.
Ah ok, fair enough. I’ve only had problems with the world news mods so far, but makes sense that some of the other mods can be bad too.
This only happens on worldnews@lemmy.ml
Mostly militant tankie mods in worldnews@lemmy.ml. The rest of the instance is fine actually; Their admins aren’t as zealous.
Unraid is bad at NAS and bad at docker. Go with a separate Nas and application server.
Basically how building new houses in suburbia works. Every new house is subsidized by the local government in the hopes that they’ll pay back enough taxes in the next 50 years before the pipes have to be replaced again.
overclock.net lives on
It’s implied that it was a decision by management. If I had to guess, it’s related to money and/or the redundancy cause by the same parent company owning both Tom’s Hardware and Anandtech.
Kind of unfortunate, since I always thought Anandtech had the better articles, but I guess this also preserves Anandtech’s legacy in some ways.
Yeah this is definitely a brand merger in some ways.
I imagine it might be due to profitability, too. I think the rate of articles has slowed down in the last 5 years, and I think losing Ian Cutress’s analysis was also tough for their articles.
It feels like a lot of the hardware journalism these days has moved to YouTube, like Gamers Nexus, Hardware Unboxed, TechTechPotato, Moore’s Law Is Dead, etc.
I think Chips and Cheese seems to be the biggest site for detailed hardware analysis these days.
Don’t jump to the complex right away
It’s more complex to have 10 different ways to do the same thing. Like, just take a week to teach your ops team how to use Docker and Kubernetes, so everything can simplified to just one Kubernetes cluster instead of 20 bespoke EC2 instances.
Cloud Native development isn’t about making systems unnecessarily complex. It’s about simplifying tools down to common, scalable components, and reusing code as often as possible.
For example We use kubernetes to run code, because kubernetes is the only platform to run code that can be automated with simple HTTP apis. It is a common platform for computing, much simpler to use than the mess of EC2 instances, cron jobs, and shell scripts that the industry used to rely on. Of course, it is a higher level abstraction than programming everything yourself in Assembly, but that’s the point.
Is there a way for me to be “notified” if shell access of any form is gained by someone?
Falco is a very powerful tool for this.
It’s a safety issue
As climate change ravages Europe, the cars will survive.