Honestly, I wish I had properly learned how to use that thing when I was younger.
I taught myself to sew by hand just fine and it’s a useful skill in life for various smaller stuff, repairs, etc.
Still, the machine would make a few things much easier.
The machine does not agree with me.
I love mine, it’s so gentle and civilized.
I wish they made a modern version with the adjustable slice width thing, it’d be perfect.
Works from SJW.
Search for your username in the modlog
This toaster:
Might as well link the Technology Connections video already.
Yes, it’s an 18 minutes video on a 1950s toaster, you can thank me later.
Yea but I didn’t realize the vaultwarden project didn’t also release client software.
I had looked into running my own vaultwarden, but without open source clients it’s maybe a bit moot. Although I guess the web interface can be considered a client, OS or browser integration is a convenient feature.
Vaultwarden ?
Edit: Nvm, that’s just the server part
Hey there’s 2 of us.
I wouldn’t care if my property stagnated or dropped in value if it meant people could afford a better life.
It only has said market value when I’m selling and I don’t intend on selling, probably ever.
I’d rather have a young family as neighbors instead of some management company doing the bare minimum maintenance and let it slowly crumble while milking renters. It’s a better community.
In a selfish roundabout way I’ve started giving a hand to the new renters nearby that I like and help them with small things that their landlord won’t fix.
10 hours is a fucking long ass time.
There’s no reason not to have called shuttles to get these people to their destination way before that.
They could have walked the rest of the way in less than that.
Utter lack of emergency response, let alone preparedness.
I’m sure they’ll receive a lousy apology email from the CEO about how they care and are deeply sorry (but still won’t fix their shit), and how this is an exceptional situation (but for which they have an email template).
I love trains, trains are great, but ViaRail needs to get their fucking shit together.
Automating prejudice.
Yea I miss the hardware fingerprint reader that was on my last one. The under screen reader is much slower and less reliable.
OP is a racist jumping through alt accounts. In their mind, they’re making of fun of some imaginary dissonance between people liking the person in the top image and not liking the person in the bottom image.
They only ever see through the perspective of a racist.
In their tiny mind, “other race = inherently bad”, so to them, non-racist people must surely be going… “other race = inherently good”.
To them, race here was some magic card they can pull out as a gotcha, as if we should like Musk because he’s African.
Their little brain cannot fathom we might dislike Musk because he’s a billionaire narcissist sociopath and not because he was born in Africa.
Right, everyone knows telnet makes you gay.
It’s all detailed in the RFC854 for the telnet protocol by J. Reynolds and J. Postel. (Gay was pronounced with a J back then, like gifs)
That’s why they later invented SSH to uh… secure you from… the… gay packets…?
Source: am network engineer.
Sorry your mom sucks.
Not my parents, but I’ve had a narcissist work colleague pester me about my partner and I not wanting to have kids, trying to convince us I guess, using her ultimate argument…
Her: But… you need to have kids so they take care of you when you’re old!
Me: So… wait. Is that the reason you had kids?
Her: Well yea! (like that’s the only logical answer, duh)
Me: … wow …
Fast forward. Her kids are all grown up now, they’ve since cut all contact and she hasn’t seen them nor her grandkids in years. I run into them once in a while and I’ve helped them out with a handful of times with things like moving or maintenance or tax reports or whatever. There’s a few things they never really got to learn growing up and anything they could ever do was never good enough for her, even though she’s terrible at most things.
Now and then, she’d still complain about them being ungrateful and I’d just ignore her… she’s never once come even close to the self-awareness that she drove them away by being a narcissist asshole.
She’s retired now, so neither of us have to deal with her now.
Great fucking plan, having kids to guilt trip them into caring for you…
They had the guts to move on and I’m proud of them.
I was probably the first to tell them so, some random passerby.
Fuck narcissists.
Hey if you could edit the spammer’s URL out of your quote/translation that’d be great.
The problem is there’s likely not a universal solution that’s guaranteed to clean everything in every case.
Cleaning specific logs/configs is much easier when you know what you’re dealing with.
Something like anonymizing a Cisco router config is easy enough because it folllows a known format that you can parse and clean.
Building a tool to anonymize some random logs from a specific software is one thing, anonymizing all logs from any software is unlikely.
Either way, it should always be double-checked and tailored to what’s being logged.
It depends a lot on what the application is logging to begin with.
If a project prints passwords in logs, consider to just GTFO as it’s terrible security practice.
There might also be sensitive info that’s not coming from a static thing like your username, but from variable data such as IP addresses, gps coordinates, or whatever thing gets logged.
Meaning a simple find&replace might be insufficient.
When possible, I tend to replace the info I remove with a short name of what I replaced out as it’s easier to understand context when it’s not all **********
or truncated.
example:
proxy_container_1 | <redacted_client1_ip> - - [17/Aug/2024:12:39:06 +0000] "GET /u/<redacted_local_user2> HTTP/1.1" 200 963 "-" "Lemmy/0.19.4; +<redacted_remote_instance3_fqdn>"
keeping the same placeholders for subsequent substitutions helps because if everything is the same, then you don’t know what’s what anymore.
(this single line would be easy enough either way, but if you have a bunch and can’t tell client1 from client50 apart anymore that can hinder troubleshooting.
regular expressions are useful in doing that, but something that works on a specific set of logs might miss sensitive info in another.
I’m sure people have made tools to help with that, possibly with regex patterns for common stuff, but even with that, you’d need to doublecheck the output to be 100% sure.
It helps a lot when whatever app doesn’t log too much sensitive info to begin with, but that’s usually out of your hands as a user.
I have a vague memory of this but it might have been an extension.
I’m not even sure they need the unpaid fare excuse tbh.