thirteene

joined 1 year ago
[–] thirteene@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago

Just give Bolivia a little beach! You don't need to be so long

[–] thirteene@lemmy.world 5 points 1 month ago

I imagine they are reprioritizing the follow up Deadpool/wolverine movie. Either that or officially updating the listing to not be a movie with Jonathon Majors, after deciding the replacement.

[–] thirteene@lemmy.world 8 points 1 month ago

I use mine primarily for media and occasionally play online with friends. They killed gold, and reverted to game pass core, so now I have to pay $10/month to play games I own. They are deleting my purchased games, ea archived an active account for inactivity when I had playtime in the calendar year. There is no new IP, they shut down studios, and raised prices, locked us into a shitty platform and started monitoring and monetizing their paid users.

They deserve this

[–] thirteene@lemmy.world 5 points 1 month ago

I only use cash at places that have a purchase portal as complicated as giving change. You want to hand me a tip machine on a stick without tap pay and select a tip amount on a tiny shitty touch screen? You can count my change, thanks. Hopefully we see some traction in public opinion regarding privacy soon. Until then banks are selling your data, but the infra is required to live a modern life.

[–] thirteene@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

I just got hit with a really weird edge case and just barely resolved a 2 day 911 to recover. During this time we likely spent at least 10 million and that's not even the primary incident.

[–] thirteene@lemmy.world 4 points 2 months ago (2 children)

The issue here is kernel level applications that can brick a box. Anti viruses compete for resources, no one should run 2 at once

[–] thirteene@lemmy.world 3 points 2 months ago

Depends on your end goal, don't pay for yourself. Tech is hard to break into, certificates can help elevate your resume when you do not have a network to leverage. It's often good to "top off" your resume when market trends shift and you are lacking experience. For instance right now AWS certificates are likely strong additions if you don't have any cloud background. My rhcsa helped get my first job and is a positive for legacy LAMP and java shops. Trending forward: you will primarily be using it to support Linux based docker containers and a lot of the networking and hardware configuration will be obfuscated away. There is a non-zero amount of file ownership and user groups; but existing organizations will have figured that out already.

[–] thirteene@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

It's because websites interpret those characters differently because of how coding requires using the physical qwerty keyboard. Essentially ">" gets used as a compator operator in programming languages, which means that it's used as a tool to instructs the computer how to do things. When we need to display the symbol, we use ">" as an "escaped character" which basically means treat it as the symbol, not the instruction set. Often search engines will use a very powerful tool called a regular expression which looks like this for phone numbers: ^(\d{3})\s\d{3}-\d{4}

And each character represents something, ^ means start with. \d means digit { means 3 of whatever's in front of me }. Breaking apart the search parameters is pretty complex and it needs to happen FAST, so at a certain point the developers just throw away things that can be a security concern like special characters like &^|`"'* specially because they can be used to maliciously attack the search engine.

For other characters: https://www.w3schools.com/html/html_entities.asp

[–] thirteene@lemmy.world 0 points 2 months ago

Llms hit memory exhaustion between prompts, each "slide" is an individual generation which is why it feels so discontinuous. This will be really exciting after a couple breakthroughs though, especially when it can reference old generations.

[–] thirteene@lemmy.world 3 points 2 months ago

It's a play by monopolys. They create a large platform (often free to start), integrate it with a bunch of other stuff, then charge you to use it. They can use the invested cost to leverage anyone on the platform, because it's often an expensive lengthy process to halt processes. The ruling is essentially stating that Microsoft either needs to allow non Microsoft accounts to chat on teams or allow you to remove your word subscription without affecting your email. Both of those are good things for consumers, but Microsoft wants to hold all of the cards on all sides, and start offering bundles like cable companies. All just to limit your options and squeeze you when they want more.

[–] thirteene@lemmy.world 4 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I work with Linux for a living and am finding the transition frustrating myself. It feels like every new is just revealing more stuff I have to configure before it works, then usually get hit with the backend of the solution as well. Be sure to check /var/log/anythingrelevant for the system reboots for logs. My display driver kept crashing.

[–] thirteene@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago

As the drone giving that news, it was so bad for TV shows. Someone rented Planet Earth which came in a 4 disc set for $100. If you lose 1 disk, we required ordering another full set. Someone lost the entire collection and was required to pay $400. I loved that job, but they made terrible decisions towards the end.

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