I really enjoy interpreting the Jesus Christ at the end not as a quote attribution, but as a frustrated epithet thrown in at the end.
wizardbeard
And with how much companies like Microsoft are shoving AI features into everything, it's a constant battle for well meaning sysadmins to keep busybody management types from getting enough force together to push through enabling this shit.
They all see it as a "no manpower required" thing that can just be switched on and used as a feather in their cap. "Look! I did a thing! For free!"
Just be careful with the reused wood. You have no way of knowing what chemicals seeped into it.
Wear a proper mask when sanding or cutting it, and I'd proabably seal it with a few layers of Killz or something along those lines.
I'll let you in on some reality about sysadmins: we generally don't care what you're doing until it causes problems. Clearly this guy's amount of traffic did.
So yeah, absolutely. This is normal and reasonable.
It has to be against the rules for situations exactly like this where OP should be using a seedbox. But generally, they have better things to do than track down every little minor rule abuse.
Like playing their own pirated games while wfh. Or fixing other problems. Most teams of people who support shit like this are understaffed.
For instance, I'm sure that people are using my work network for all sorts of shit. I've seen people streaming Netflix to their desks. We lock down what we can, and don't worry about shit until we have to because it's causing a problem. Like years ago when someone streamed Netflix at an old location with I think only a T1 connection, saturated the network connection, and then no one could access anything on the network.
Most people don't go around looking for reasons to enforce the rules. They use them when they have to because there's a problem.
And that's the only reason I'm even vaguely considering picking up a Switch 2 around launch.
That said, even with a gen 1 Switch, booting into the CFW is just enough of a pain that I don't do it often. Gotta grab the shim for the rail, plug it into something that can deliver the payload... ugh.
I miss the days of Wii and PSP homebrew. No online shit to get banned from, no special booting techniques. 3DS cfw came pretty close in terms of ease of use.
That said, being able to pirate games directly from the 3DS and Switch was a big step up from having to transfer files over to the memory card (PSP) or effectively needing a dedicated external HDD/partition (Wii). Even if it was slow as hell and couldn't use my full internet speed.
I was going to post about the lost Megaman Legends phone game, but it was recovered last year by the same guy that preserved this! Woo!
Great to finally see my boy Jimmy Chug get some love! Don't know how so many directors get away with leaving him out of the credits.
I'm just a scripting monkey for a systems engineering/admin team, but I have one system integration that is being fireman carried by a ton of my code. I've since learned that there are entire consulting companies built off selling a slightly expanded version of what I've one man army'd together. Maybe I overestimate my skill, but I feel qualified to talk about large projects and long term sustainability.
I'm convinced that people who talk about things like backwards compatibility as if it's super difficult just aren't willing to try. I won't say shit like that is super easy, but it's not black magic.
I think there's a lot of programmers out there more interested in building shit than ensuring any sort of quality, that it'll be maintainable longer than the next code review, or in thinking about any downstream effects of their code beyond the limited scope they're developing in. Stuff like backwards compat is largely just another design pattern in a sea of them that you learn through experience. But you have to try it to learn what works and what doesn't. Go try folks.
I know Nuts N Bolts wasn't what anyone wanted from a Banjo Kazooie 3, but I think the rendition of Spiral Mountain in itwas beautiful. I'd love a remake of the first two in that style!
Yeah, I think they went a little too hard with Crash 4. I understand wanting to make sure there was a reason to play it instead of the remakes, but sometimes it's okay to just give players more of what already worked.
The amount of domain knowledge to even begin to parse what the fuck you're talking about is absurd.
Secondly, why would anyone want this?
I'm glad you've found yet another project to look nice for your github portfolio, but maybe be up front about that instead of drowning everyone in near gibberish and what seems like poorly written advertisement.
"Hey, I've made another quasi-social media network leveraging the fediverse, AI, and a programming language made to resemble normal english. Check it out!"
Otherwise this is just blatant buzzword salad. I'm going to guess you're also using AI to get project idea involving the latest buzzwords? Maybe even using AI to write this psuedo ad-copy?
Again, more power to you if you're trying to build a portfolio/github/resume where you can say that you've "created numerous projects leveraging federated social media and AI", but just be up front about what you're doing when you post about it here please.
No one needs more shit pretending to be something it isn't. It's okay for your little portfolio project to be just that.
!LemmySilver
Simplehuman lidded step-open trashcan.
Why in the fuck would anyone spend over $100 on a damn trashcan?
We got tired of the plastic ones we were buying breaking, and they were around $60 to begin with.
It holds the bags properly with none falling in. It has built in storage for empty bags inside. It is easily cleanable. The lid opens and closes smoothly, no slamming open or shut. When closed, it keeps any odors inside.
It's been the main trashcan in the central area of our home for four years and is still going strong. So many others we had would only last maybe half a year.