• 0 Posts
  • 16 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: October 12th, 2023

help-circle





  • Social engineering, arguably, is one of the harder things to learn.

    It’s a collection of soft skills, and if you’ve been paying attention to rank and file tech jobs, places are looking for people with soft skills because they’re so impractical to train.

    This goes down to your basic help desk tech.

    Anyone with an interest in computers can sit down and learn how to analyze and exploit weakness in code. In fact, it’s a fun puzzle. Dealing with other people, let alone establishing oneself as another person and fucking SELLING that character enough to get what you need?

    People write off social engineering far too quickly. It’s quick, it’s effective, and if done well, the person you exploited doesn’t even realize they’ve been tricked.


  • The band I’ve seen live the most often.

    From a packed bar that was standing room only, to tours with massive names (at the time) like Slayer and Lamb of God.

    They always brought it in live performances.

    And then if you had the luck to interact with them like people on the street, they were generally super chill, though Alexi did go off on Rupeé (spelling?) on my behalf.

    Rupeé was drunk as hell, talking to fans, staggered into me. No harm, no foul, all good. Then Alexi starts chewing him out in a mix of English and Finnish until he realized I was chill about it all. That was a good night.

    RIP Alexi.




  • Case@lemmynsfw.comtoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldServer Hardware?
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Performance isn't key. But I like performance, lol. I also wasn't aware of their more recent practices. So thank you.

    I'll have to check out the HP mini. As I said, just barely scratched the surface on researching this, and its more of a thought than a project at the moment, lol.

    I just can't afford (and cool) enterprise level stuff at home. It was free (to me) so no big loss other than buying a better CPU used ~50 bucks. I've spent more on worse ideas lol.


  • Cost and a personal bias, also I've seen more helpful communities amongst Linux and FOSS advocates than trying to deal with a big brand.

    I've done a lot of IT stuff in my life, even before working in IT.

    I've seen too many issues from big brands, and its usually caused by the company.

    I have a Pi 2 from way back. I've thrown so many distros at that thing over time, and without fail I don't run into any problems I didn't personally create while learning or through human error.

    I understand all too well that those big brands have support for businesses, warranties, etc. It makes them cost effective long term for business. At a personal level I just don't see the benefits outweighing the negatives.

    Again, personal bias. Same core reason I avoid apple products, bias, though I mainly dislike apples cost combined with their closed off, well, everything.


  • I've got enterprise level hardware, rack moubtable all that jazz.

    Between the cost of power, and the heat it generates (which uses more AC and thus power) its not feasible to run it.

    I'm looking into clustering some raspberry pis for a more power (and heat) efficient hardware as my next project. Barely scratched the surface of research though.

    So hey, if anyone has any tips or links, it would be much appreciated.