thejml

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I don’t think this will do what they think… While i understand their pop up, the general public is just going to say “huh, youtube is slow” and either move on, complain to their isp, but a new computer, or stop using YouTube and spend more time on insta/tiktok. My parents for example, have done the first three (well they almost bought one until I convinced them why it’s happening) and are working on just not using YouTube as much.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 days ago

And no one was surprised.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 4 days ago (4 children)

Reading the Docs, it seems like PodMan is the replacement for docker. You could try containerd/nerdctl, but podman is likely the best way for you. RHEL10 docs even say it supports the older docker config options

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago

Also, sometimes: it is scary BECAUSE it is familiar.

[–] [email protected] 25 points 1 week ago

Oh, but it does. It helps soooo much. Something about the pinpoint pressure in just the right spot just hits so good… But you can’t just keep biting it forever, and generally the itch comes back again soon after.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Tailscale/headscale/wire guard is different from a normal vpn setup.

VPN: you tunnel into a remote network and all your connections flow through as if you’re on that remote network.

Tailscale: your devices each run the daemon and basically create a separate, encrypted, dedicated overlay network between them no matter where they are or what network they are on. You can make an exit node where network traffic can exit the overlay network to the local network for a specific cidr, but without that, you’re only devices on the network are the devices connected to the overlay. I can setup a set of severs to be on the Tailscale overlay and only on that network, and it will only serve data with the devices also on the overlay network, and they can be distributed anywhere without any crazy router configuration or port forwarding or NAT or whatever.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Honestly, that sounds like a keepalived replacement or equivalent. I went with keepalived because I’m also using the IP for the proxmox cluster itself so it had to be outside kube, but the idea is the same. If all you’re using the IP for is kube, go with kube-vip! But let us know how it works!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (4 children)

You’ll want to look into “keepalived” to setup a shared IP across all worker nodes in the cluster and either directly forward, or setup haproxy on each to do the forwarding from that keepalived IP to the ingresses.

I’m running 6 kube nodes (running Talos) running in a 3node proxmox cluster. Both haproxy and keepalived run on the 3 nodes to manage the IP and route traffic to the appropriate backend. Haproxy just allows me to migrate nodes and still have traffic hit an ingress kube node.

Keepalived manages which node is the active node and therefore listens to the IP based on backend communication and a simple local script to catch when nodes can’t serve traffic.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I’ve tried them all and in the last year or so, none of worked anymore. They fixed the glitch.

[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I feel like people always miss the point of a Nintendo console. While it’d be cool to have HDR and OLED and such, it’s not really a big deal. It doesn’t really impact my ability to have fun with Mario Kart or Party. It doesn’t change my enjoyment of animal crossing, etc.

I’ve got a PS5 hooked to a 4k HDR 120hz screen, and enjoy the performance and graphical fidelity regularly, and there are some games I’m still picking a switch up to play. Heck, I still play on a Wii fairly frequently. The controllers, game types/styles, game quality, accessibility, replayability, etc.

[–] [email protected] 35 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

It should never be just “we want to have a child so we will”. That’s self centered, short sighted and irresponsible.

Anyone looking to have children should think through at the minimum:

  • do we have the money to raise a child?
  • who will be able to raise and care for them
  • will the child have the ability to grow and succeed in the environment we’re bringing them into?
  • will the above to be to the standard we would want for the child?

To bring a child into a bad environment, with no time or money to spend on the child, is to bring the child into this world setup for failure and would only put a drain on the system, the resources, the climate, the relatives, etc.

People are choosing (in Japan and elsewhere around the world) to not have children because of the less than favorable conditions outlined above, and many others.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago

It’s odd for me in that my 20’s and 30’s were full of changes (relationships, moves, kids, job, etc) and by all accounts should have been the more stressful, tumultuous time, but I definitely just cruised right through feeling like I had it together and bouncing from challenge to challenge.

Now that I’m in my 40’s, I’ve sorted out the big things, I’ve stabilized my life and I’ve got more experience and wisdom… but I’m simultaneously aware of more things I know I can’t solve and that’s much harder to deal with mentally.

 

On a large empty slab of asphalt, two BMWs take off. They drive in figure eights and along an oval path separate from each other but nearly in tandem, like two ice skaters practicing the same routine on a piece of black ice before coming to a stop.

Neither of the cars has a driver. That's not that impressive; self-driving cars in testing environments shouldn't impress anyone at this point. Essentially the automaker tells the car to drive a route, and it does it. The important thing here is why these cars, outfitted with additional sensors, are driving along the same route again and again, each time depressing the accelerator the same amount and applying the exact amount of pressure on the brakes: They're testing hardware with the least amount of variables you can encounter outside of a lab.

"It's boring for human drivers," says BMW's project lead for driverless development, Philipp Ludwig. When a human is asked to perform the exact same task repeatedly, the quality of the work diminishes as they lose interest or become fatigued. For a computer-controlled car, it can do this all day. And it has done exactly that.

 

Four years from now, if all goes well, a nuclear-powered rocket engine will launch into space for the first time. The rocket itself will be conventional, but the payload boosted into orbit will be a different matter.

 

A bill requiring social media companies, encrypted communications providers and other online services to report drug activity on their platforms to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) advanced to the Senate floor Thursday, alarming privacy advocates who say the legislation turns the companies into de facto drug enforcement agents and exposes many of them to liability for providing end-to-end encryption.

 

G/O Media, a major online media company that runs publications including Gizmodo, Kotaku, Quartz, Jezebel, and Deadspin, has announced that it will begin a "modest test" of AI content on its sites.

The trial will include "producing just a handful of stories for most of our sites that are basically built around lists and data," Brown wrote. "These features aren't replacing work currently being done by writers and editors, and we hope that over time if we get these forms of content right and produced at scale, AI will, via search and promotion, help us grow our audience."

view more: next ›