kumi

joined 5 days ago
[–] kumi@feddit.online 7 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago)

Bah.

Mint's fine and Kate runs all right on it and Cinnamon. All it takes is configuring your normal Qt theming to be pretty.

[–] kumi@feddit.online 2 points 5 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago)

Nope but I guess a workaround would be to make a oneshot workaround-nvidia-gpu.service systemd unit file that runs the command and have the lxc autostart depend on it?

Might be something about PCI resets that running the command triggers 🤷‍♀️

[–] kumi@feddit.online 2 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

Without looking into it at all, there are plenty of possible valid reasons why someone would choose to pick a fresh pseudonym for a project like this. I think it's important that we don't lose that, socially.

Give it time and let them prove themselves if this is relevant to you.

[–] kumi@feddit.online 1 points 6 hours ago

BunDGiE LiNuxXx 🤪

[–] kumi@feddit.online 2 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 7 hours ago)

There are some bug fixes that are relevant for installs and base images. For example, security update in GPG is probably not a big deal for you but might be for someone building and pushing things from these.
Kernel, firmware and microcode updates might only affect a small minority of users depending on hardware.

[–] kumi@feddit.online 3 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago)

Operating and securing Postgres is a steeper learning curve. MariaDB is more forgiving for best-effort shoestring setups without compensating scalability for it.

As a dev I'm agnostic, as an owner and computer scientiest I prefer Postgres, as a sysadmin or *Ops I will put my hand up for MariaDB any day if I'll be on call or maintain deployments.

[–] kumi@feddit.online 4 points 8 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago)

You can replicate across more than one provider and do automated regular monitoring that backups are still accessible.

If one goes down you hopefully have time to figure out a replacment before the other(s) do.

Probably not worth it for a bunch of xvid dvdrips or historical archives of full system-level backups but for critical data it's sensible.

[–] kumi@feddit.online 4 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

What you can do is segregate networks.

If the browser runs in, say, a VM with only access to the intranet and no internet access at all, this risk is greatly reduced.

[–] kumi@feddit.online 1 points 1 day ago

LVM itself does not provide redundancy, that’s RAID.

I think this is potentially a bit confusing.

LVM does provide RAID functionality and can be used to set up and manage redundant volumes.

See --type and --mirror under man 8 lvcreate.

 

An overview of the work done on the ALPM project in 2024 and 2025.

[–] kumi@feddit.online 7 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

My next suspicion from what you've shared so far apart from what others suggested would be something out of the http server loop.

Have you used some free public DNS server and inadvertently queried it with the name from a container or something? Developer tooling building some app with analytics not disabled? Any locally connected AI agents having access to it?

[–] kumi@feddit.online 12 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

You say you have a wildcard cert but just to make sure: I don't suppose you've used ACME for Letsencrypt or some other publicly trusted CA to issue a cert including the affected name? If so it will be public in Certificate Transparency Logs.

If not I'd do it again and closely log and monitor every packet leaving the box.

[–] kumi@feddit.online 6 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

I adored Budgie precisely because it was still on X11 🥲

Anyway, for a relatively simple and clean holistic GNOME-that's-not-GNOME, it's a very polished desktop. Worth checking out for your F&F.

 

How to test and safely keep using your janky RAM without compromising stability using memtest86+ and the memmap kernel param.

 

How to test and safely keep using your janky RAM without compromising stability using memtest86+ and the memmap kernel param.

 

How to test and safely keep using your janky RAM without compromising stability using memtest86+ and the memmap kernel param.

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