IsoKiero

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz 3 points 2 years ago

I have older 1500VA FSP running my hardware. I've changed batteries on it twice and it just keeps going and the batteries are easy to buy&replace. I suppose newer models are similar, but check the documentation before deciding.

[–] IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 years ago

You want a reverse proxy. But if nextcould is already reserving ports 80/443 you need a bit more configuration as it's not possible for multiple processes to use the same port.

[–] IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz 7 points 2 years ago

find /home/user -type f -perm /u+x -not -path "/home/user/Documents" -exec cp {} ~/Documents \;

Run it without exec -parameter to get a list of files affected, I'd guess that that will catch more than you want as it only checks that it's a normal file and has the excecutable -bit on. To get only bash-scripts you'd first need to get a list of files with find and then check if it's a script with something (grep or maybe file should work) and copy based on that result, but it shouldn't be too difficult to write a script for it.

[–] IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz 2 points 2 years ago

Johan ne on kohta kuukauden siellä ollut. Suklaat samaten, kaiken halloweenkrääsän seassa.

[–] IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz 14 points 2 years ago

Above all else, it was kinda forced on us. Most of us were comfortable with sysv already.

And at least for me it solved a problem which didn't exist. Sure, there's some advantages, but when it rolled out it was a huge pain in the rear and caused various problems and made things more complicated for no apparent reason.

[–] IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz 5 points 2 years ago

En kyllä osaa yhtään sanoa, että kuinka kaukolämmön käy jos sähköt on poikki isommalta alueelta

Näin yhtäkkiä hihasta ravistaen sanoisin, että ainakin jonkinlainen generaattori ja kierto siellä laitoksella on vähän pakko olla, kun ne kattilat ei sammu ihan hetkessä ja ilman vesikiertoa siitä kattilasta tulee aika äkkiä pommi, mutta vähän veikkaan että sitä varajärjestelmää ei ole mitoitettu sen mukaan että koko jakeluverkko pysyy kuumana.

[–] IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz 3 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Toivottavasti ei ainakaan hanasta(joka olisi kunnallisessa vedessä kiinni), koska se kirjaimellisesti vesittäisi säästöt.

Väittäisin, että jos kunnallisesta hanasta tulee vettä niin sitten tulee myös pöntöstäkin ihan normaaliin tapaan. Tuo kantovesi voi hyvinkin pitää paikkaansa jos matkaa ei pitkästi ole. Yhdelläkin 10l ämpärillä huuhtelee tuon ikäisten istuntoja useamman kerran ja toki jos kiinteää ei ole niin muutamakin litra riittää hyvin siihen että hajuhaitat poistuu suurimmalta osin.

“Sähkö tulee töpselistä, vesi hanasta ja ruoka kaupasta”.

Täälläpäin ei nyt tälle syksylle pidempiä katkoja ole ollut (koputetaan varulta puuta), mutta tuossa joskus 5-6 vuotta sitten oli kevätmyräkän aikaan 22 tunnin katko (näitä oli silloin paljon pitkin valtakuntaa) ja siinä kyllä kävi selväksi että miten äkkiä monella elämä menee melkoiseksi erämökkeilyksi myös (tai ehkä etenkin) täällä maalla. Vettä tosin tuli koko ajan, mutta muutamakin tuttu oli aika ihmeissään että pirullakos sitä laitellaan lapsille ruokaa ja pestään takamusta.

Omassa mökissä on puuhella ja leivinuuni, eli ilman sähköjä pärjää kyllä pidempiäkin aikoja ja samalle hellalle mahtuu kyllä naapurinkin kattila jos tarvitsee, mutta ilman vettä monesta asiasta tulee aika hankalaa. Ruoka- ja juomavedet saa kyllä vaikka kantamalla, mutta vessassa käynti ja muu hygienia on aika äkkiä aika haastavaa.

[–] IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz 42 points 2 years ago (4 children)

I don't know what to pick, but something else than PDF for the task of transferring documents between multiple systems. And yes, I know, PDF has it's strengths and there's a reason why it's so widely used, but it doesn't mean I have to like it.

Additionally all proprietary formats, specially ones who have gained enough users so that they're treated like a standard or requirement if you want to work with X.

[–] IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz 22 points 2 years ago

I ran one for a while. In Finland legislation is a bit different, so I wasn't worried about breaking the law or getting sued, but my ISP got in touch pretty quickly. They were professionals and understood the situation when I explained why my traffic might look "a bit" suspicious and I attempted to clean up bad actors from the traffic with filtering and whatnot, but eventually ISP got enough complaints and they were pretty much forced to tell me that either I shut the exit node down or they'll cut my line.

As I said, they were very professional about it, and managed the whole experiment as good as I ever could have hoped, but my agreement with them has an option that if I'm letting malware and bad actors leave the network even after warnings they can shut the connection down. And that's understandable, I suppose they have similar agreements with other providers and they received all the abuse mail my exit node was causing, so I'm still a happy customer with them even if they eventually took the hard way.

I'm still pretty sure it would be possible to run filtered exit node, but it would require far more time and other resources that I'm willing to spend on a project like that and I'm not sure if a single person is enough for it anyways.

So, yes, do your homework and be careful. Legislation plays a significant part (depending on where you live), but your ISP most likely won't like it either.

[–] IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz 3 points 2 years ago

If I was in a situation where starlink was only option for connectivity, sure, but at the front lines cell service isn't really reliable as whole towers are missing and/or damaged and even if the cell tower was there it's not a quarantee that it's connected to anything or has power. Starlink doesn't require a (literal) ton of infrastructure on the ground around you and that's why it's been really useful, and often the only option, Ukraine has.

Starlink as a technology is really cool and when it came to the market I hoped I would get to play with it some day, but now as the company is ran by that twat who shovels DoD money into his own pockets and is on his knees for russians the interest and 'geek factor' isn't really there anymore.

[–] IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz 6 points 2 years ago

En nyt ihan noin raakasti tuota lukisi, mutta kieltämättä väärinkäsityksen vaara on olemassa. Kotikutoisia huijareita on ihan riittämiin ja ei tuo tekniikka estä sitä, etteikö nimenomaan suomeen kohdennettua hyökkäystä voisi tehdä vaikka ostamalla läjän prepaid-puhelinliittymiä ja soittamalla niiden läpi. Tuossa tosin kustannus on jo semmoinen, että mikään microsoftsupport-huijaus tuskin lähtee rkioskille kortteja ostamaan.

[–] IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz 12 points 2 years ago (1 children)

It indeed is. According to minusrus site Russia had ~5700 artillery units when war started and I highly doubt that they can manufacture new ones faster than they're losing units, not to even mention ammunition shortage and logistics issues.

They're not completely depleted yet, and most likely never will be as new units are pushed out every day, but advances at Crimea (among others) suggests that their capabilities are dropping, so once mine fields and fortifications on the lines fall there might not be that much in the way before Ukraine reaches 1991 borders.

It's still going to take time and monumental amounts of effort, equipment and (unfortunately) Ukrainian lifes before Russia is forced out of their country, but I strongly believe that it will happen. The west, and Europe spesifically, just need to keep up with demands from the field. Letting Ukraine fall would be catastrophic for stability in whole Europe and even globally.

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