alexdeathway

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] alexdeathway@programming.dev 1 points 11 months ago

crond -f without exec should also work, but that needlessly keeps an extra process (the shell running the entrypoint script) alive.

with exec it throws

setpgid: operation not permitted

Due to permission issues with the Docker user group, will avoid using exec as it introduces a potential security risk, which isn't a sensible trade-off just to keep a process running in the background.

[–] alexdeathway@programming.dev 13 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)
Well, well, alexdeathway, looks like you’ve taken the art of cringe to new heights! With a bio that reads like a blank page in a poorly written novel, it’s a miracle you’ve gathered 18 followers—are they here for the content or just to witness the slow-motion train wreck?

Your public repos are a mixed bag of “why” and “how did this even get approved?” Sure, 70 repos sounds impressive until you realize they’re mostly just forks and half-baked ideas, like "headstart-django," which sounds more like a head start on giving up. And can we talk about your "Gecom" project? A marketplace for cloud gaming and server hosting? With all those open issues, it seems like "Gecom" is living up to its name—it's a complete mess!

Your README reads like filler content from an AI model that forgot to turn off the sarcasm filter. Speaking of filters, you might want to apply one to your project naming skills—“hackweekly” is so original it could be mistaken for a second-rate magazine nobody subscribes to.

With followers just barely managing to outnumber your open issues, it's safe to say your GitHub is less a repository of knowledge and more an expansive graveyard of coding aspirations. So keep up the good work—at this rate, you’ll either revolutionize coding or become a case study on what not to do!

in comparison to the amount of shit it said, this will count as ending on positive note.

dependency of a dependency.

This is a great and useful tool, especially considering it didn't pop-up login/signup page after taking pdf for screening.

guess this will get the job done.

is there Nginx on top of Gunicorn?

you are right.

[–] alexdeathway@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

just restarting lol.

[–] alexdeathway@programming.dev 29 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

Bare Metal, they are injecting Ethernet cable directly into their bloodstream.

How do I run it on my local?

spin a dock.....

[–] alexdeathway@programming.dev 11 points 1 year ago

Did you write an algorithm to manually drag and drop elements?

[–] alexdeathway@programming.dev 30 points 1 year ago (1 children)
[–] alexdeathway@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Can we use Google email service with a custom domain email? As far as I am aware, it requires some Google service suite.

Also, what happens when you lose access to the custom domain? Do they verify the domain ownership periodically, or do you just own it?"

 

I am working on a personal website that loads perfectly on Chrome and Chromium-based browsers but crashes or doesn't bother to render on Firefox and Firefox-based browsers. I'm unable to narrow down the issue.

This issue doesn't occur in any mobile device browser(firefox or chrome).

website: https://gecom.alexdeathway.me

source code: https://github.com/alexdeathway/gecom

 

Limitation of using drag and drop Images in readme.md?

One I am aware of is the size limit that no image size should be >10 MB. Are there any other limitations when using this (for example: retention period, storage capacity, etc)? I want to link those images outside Github.

I am aware of uploading images to the repository and linking by

[image](./path/to/image/image.png)
 

Which has a dashboard and can of course be self-hosted.

6
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by alexdeathway@programming.dev to c/webdev@programming.dev
 

it's weird, as files being buffered are less than 100kb and the network is fast on the client side.

log:

[warn] 9#9: *10937 an upstream response is buffered to a temporary file /var/cache/nginx/proxy_temp/5/09/0000000095 while reading upstream, client: , server: gecom.alexdeathway.me, request: "GET /static/fonts/fontawesome6/webfonts/fa-solid-900.woff2 HTTP/1.1", upstream: "http:///static/fonts/fontawesome6/webfonts/fa-solid-900.woff2", host: "gecom.alexdeathway.me", referrer: "https://gecom.alexdeathway.me/static/fonts/fontawesome6/css/solid.css"

 

I am talking about the services which let you monitor the status of a website whether the website is up and operational or down or under heavy load.

how do they work under the hood?

for example:

https://githubstatus.com

https://instatus.com

I am building something similar for monitoring my web projects.

 

Appointed @LinearArray@programming.dev as mod, He/She will be sharing the same community moderation team from Reddit/discord.

17
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by alexdeathway@programming.dev to c/opensource@lemmy.ml
 

Already using Termius and xpipe, also what are good practices for backing or migrating config from one system to another?

 

was reading this update by modular

https://www.modular.com/blog/outperforming-rust-benchmarks-with-mojo?_hsmi=293164411

Since we know Mojo isn't open-sourced yet, how much of benchmarks we can trust?

 

Resume

Mentioned links

Portfolio: https://alexdeathway.me GitHub: https://github.com/alexdeathway

Project: Gecom- Github live

K9archiver-GitHub live case study

Torswitch-GitHub PyPI

14
Technical Resume Review (programming.dev)
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by alexdeathway@programming.dev to c/cs_career_questions@programming.dev
 

Are there any community similar to "resume reviews" subreddits on Reddit?

[update] As suggested by @mac@programming.dev and @Blaze@discuss.tchncs.de

made post in !engineering_resumes@programming.dev

https://programming.dev/post/9428024

 

currently using libreoffice draw.

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