CAWright

joined 2 years ago
[–] CAWright 1 points 4 days ago

Always did like the look of those models.

[–] CAWright 1 points 4 days ago

Thanks for the Archi Wiki link. I always forget about that thing. I'm a bit fan of the late model, low mileage computer purchases. They are cheap and I'm keeping something out of a landfill in Africa.

[–] CAWright 1 points 4 days ago

That's where my AMD focus came from. I assume the BIOSes are different and may at least have the option to re-enable S2. I've seen a few of the 8840 processors and the laptops look nice. There's specifically an Asus one I like but I've ready mixed reviews on it with Linux.

[–] CAWright 1 points 4 days ago

I'd love a Framework but the 13 is a bit too small for my old eyes and the 16 is just too heavy. I've gotten spoiled by lightweight laptops. I was looking at that 16 for a long time, though.

[–] CAWright 2 points 4 days ago

No kidding. My old Dells are great but the newer beefier one requires me to spend alot of thought on keeping it charged. I went back to my M1 Mac just for the lack of worry about having enough power. I wish MS didn't have such power over the vendors but I also wish we could figure this out on the Linux side. I've searched and searched for an S0ix solution but finally gave up and asked here about other hardware.

[–] CAWright 2 points 4 days ago

I've heard alot of those stories but have never experienced them. I hope I'm not just trading one problem for another in trying to find a good sleeping laptop.

 

This is my one deal killer for Linux on the Desktop. I have a stack of laptops with Linux installed (mostly Fedora). They are all Dell Latitudes. My main two are a Gen 12 i7 and a Gen 8 i5. I'd rather use the Gen 12 i7 (it also has more RAM and storage). However, the i7 doesn't have S2 sleep, only S0ix. When I shut the lid, it will lose about 40%-50% battery over an 8 hour period. The Gen 8 i5 does have S2 and sleeps okay with it. I only get a 10% drop in battery over the same period.

I hear that this is some Microsoft-Dell shenanigans to "better" support Win10/11. But is there a lightweight 14" or 15" laptop out there that will run Linux well and sleep without draining the battery so much? Would and AMD system work better than Intel?

I see all the complaints about sleep but there has to be something better than 40%-50% drop on the nightly that would require me to keep it on power just to have a fresh laptop when I need it.

[–] CAWright 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Except that most risks are from bad leadership decisions. Exhibit A: patches exist for so many vulnerabilities that remain unpatched because of bad business decisions.

I think in a theoretical sense, she is correct. However, in practice things are much different.

[–] CAWright 2 points 1 week ago

It sounds like we are pretty similar in our attitudes.

[–] CAWright 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

I completely agree with everything you've said. I often wonder if the people complaining about VA healthcare are just grumpy old codgers who don't pay attention, aren't kind, and need someone else to clean up their messes.

I'm sure the great care I've gotten here at CAVHS is somewhat due to being active in my own care and being courteous to those providing it.

I do know that different areas have different populations and demographics. We probably have more old people here than in Colorado but we are also a much more lightly populated state. I'm just curious how that translates to waits and attitudes out there.

On the 90d to 30d by calling, I just did that with a sleep study here. I was scheduled for June of next year and a quick call a few days later got it moved up to November.

 

Anyone in here a veteran who uses the the VA for healthcare in the Denver/Front Range area?

I was previously in Colorado Springs but didn't use VA until just before I left. I only had one or two appointments after I lost my job and private healthcare.

I'm currently in Little Rock, AR and use VA here for all my healthcare. I'm considering a move from Arkansas back to Colorado but to the Denver area this time. The VA here has been great with only minor delays in well used areas of care. I've used primary care mostly but they'll send me off to speciality clinics for exams and other care occassionally. Every interaction here has been better than any civilian or military care I've had before.

How is the VA on the Front Range?

  • Is it overcrowded with tons of delays for any care or is is reasonable to get timely care if you aren't a grumpy old curmudgeon who lives to complain?
  • Will the providers spend time with you and work with you to get your needs met or is care more like a drive through where you only get a few minutes with a provider at each appointment?
  • How are things like imaging, gastrointestinal? eye clinic? mail order pharmacy? physical therapy?
  • How often do you have to rely on community care?

Any other general advice or thoughts?

[–] CAWright 2 points 2 weeks ago

Unfortunately, humanity is better at making people feel small than building them up. And the folks who succumb to this are likely already in a compromised state so it will be hard, if not impossible, for them to pull themselves out alone.

[–] CAWright 4 points 2 weeks ago

Exactly this. It’s the same playbook for more than just those two groups.

[–] CAWright 68 points 2 weeks ago (6 children)

Isn't this basically what religion does, as well?

6
submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by CAWright to c/blueteam
 

I need some help here. I'm looking for vulnerability management software that accepts data from vulnerability scanners (Tenable.io and Nessus in my case) and allows for analysts to review the scanned vulnerabilities for further action. This will mostly be in creating tickets, but I want analysts to be able to group vulns together where appropriate (e.g., one system has a ton of vulns because it's obviously been left out of an automated patching program, the solution is not to patch each vulnerability but to include it in the automation) and create tickets appropriately. It also need to support simple Risk Acceptance workflows (no giant approval chains, but likely more just analysts grouping and marking sets of vulns as RA). Finally, it needs to be multi-tenant or at least have some siloing capabilities.

We are currently using Tenable.io for on-going vulnerability scanning in some smaller clients, but the vulnerability management functionality is severely lacking. I've looked at Nucleus, but it looks to be far too much for what we need. They also have a 5000 seat minimum and come out to around $10/asset, which is above our price range.

I don't want to replace Tenable as I trust it for quality of scanning, but I'd potentially switch to Rapid7 or Qualys if that worked with another vuln mgmt tool better.

Thoughts?

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