Tip, get a domain with your last name so you can immediately change the name and have the old email redirect to the new
I joined Lemmy back in 2020 and have been using it as @[email protected] until somewhere in 2023 when I switched to lemmy.world. I’m interested in systemd/Linux, FOSS, and Selfhosting.
- 430 Posts
- 1.22K Comments
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Go Away Microsoft! The Netherlands is Quietly Building Its Own GitHub ReplacementEnglish
4·4 days agoWat is het toch een mooi taaltje
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Go Away Microsoft! The Netherlands is Quietly Building Its Own GitHub ReplacementEnglish
12·4 days agoThey’re using the same software (Forgejo)
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•Calendars should be discounted based on number of months left in that yearEnglish
5·7 days agoFollow up, do people still buy calendars?
Buy? Yes, several times
Use? No
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Which instances have the most ban-happy moderators? Analysis insideEnglish
1·7 days agoCould you make a graph with defederations? I suspect that plays a role
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Which instances have the most ban-happy moderators? Analysis insideEnglish
4·7 days agoI think they’re defederated from poorly moderated instances and therefore don’t need to ban as many users. Perhaps db0 doesn’t defederate as often?
We are obviously looking at things like Mythos, which is more sophisticated at finding vulnerabilities. In the next week or so, we will be changing our tack on coding the open and making our code public until we’re on top of that risk.
Most of our repos, unless they’re essential, will be removed for security reasons.
Security by obscurity because security vulnerabilities don’t exist if you can’t see them
qaz@lemmy.worldMto
Videos@lemmy.world•We Uncovered a Multi-Million Dollar Plot to Change What You Eat— The new food pyramid was built by corporate interests.English
2·9 days agoI’m not seeing that behavior on Jerboa
qaz@lemmy.worldOPto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Why do Chinese sites often use a Serif font?English
9·10 days agoInteresting, I never knew what that strange monospaced font was
qaz@lemmy.worldto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Gabe Newell was an enthusiastic supporter of OpenAI in 2018, donating $20 million and even acting as the sole member of an 'informal advisory board'English
122·10 days agoAltman took the money and then OpenAI abandoned the non-profit structure to become a for-profit entity (2 years ago)
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Has anyone actually eaten or diped OREO with MilkEnglish
1·10 days agoI haven’t
I feel like I often recognize others, but I obviously can’t tell who I don’t recognize 🤷
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Which computer-related belief do you hold without any foundation?English
1·10 days agoA belief without anything to base it off? CPU’s shouldn’t have tried so hard to get faster and should just have gotten more cores a decade ago. Why bother with fancy branch prediction systems to make one thing faster than it should when it’s switching between hundreds of tasks anyway.
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Chinese Courts Rule Companies Cannot Fire Workers Simply to Replace Them With AIEnglish
5·10 days agoPeople only read the title, not the article
You can’t require reading the article before someone vote/comment, but what if communities could enable “ponder voting” where users can only vote 30 seconds after viewing the post? This would prevent people from scrolling by from voting, but people who at least slightly skim the article first won’t be affected.
Probably not viably due to it having to be supported by all platforms, but just a thought.
EDIT: It could work by returning a JWT with a post ID and time when fetching the post and having the vote endpoint support providing it. Although, I can also see it being a bit annoying and being trivially bypassed by adding some code to the client.
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft Teams users are extremely angry at new banner asking them to payEnglish
32·12 days agoI think most Teams users would only pay not to use it
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Europe@feddit.org•Dutch central bank dithces AWS and chooses Lidl for European CloudEnglish
5·13 days agoIt wasn’t cheap last time I checked, the smallest database option costs more than €100/month. This while Azure has a €12/month postgres offering with seemingly similarish specs.
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•GitHub Copilot is moving to usage-based billingEnglish
2·13 days agoIt will suggest code completions while programming, can ask answer questions about code, and can edit and run code if asked.
Assuming reliability is the priority I would suggest going with Tailscale Funnels or a cheap VPS acting as intermediary.
I don’t have a lot of experience with dealing with GCNAT, but perhaps you could look into some solution with UPnP or RFC 6887.
qaz@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•GitHub - minio/minio: "This repository was archived by the owner on Apr 25, 2026. It is now read-only."English
2·14 days agoobject_store does indeed also support WebDAV among a variety of other protocols, Apache Druid or Apache Pinot probably would be better examples. My only experience with WebDAV is with Nextcloud and hasn’t been that great because it has been very slow, probably should look into it sometime.
EDIT: Apparently it supports CAS, and even has a locking mechanism










I guess that exists