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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: August 16th, 2024

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  • Yeah, but MP was very obviously a “designed for Enshittification” company when they were charging like $20 for unlimited movies in a month and paying out full price for movie tickets that in my area were around $16 … if I used it twice they lost a lot of money. Hell, if I used it 3x in 2 months they still lost money.

    For my family, it was very much a “this isn’t going to last, enjoy it while you can” program…

    It did definitely show that people not going to movies isn’t a shift in people’s enjoyment at theaters and is instead very clearly a cost issue. Price it appropriately and people will be back in the seats. Price it too high and they’ll just wait the 3 months until it comes out on streaming/disc or just completely forget about it altogether

    Just my $.02

    ETA: You’re willing to overlook sticky floors or whatever at a $5 matinee, you’re not going to overlook it paying nearly $20 and the nicer chairs are now an expectation and not just a ‘value add’, so that’s not enough!


  • It’s supposed to be a place to showcase art, not a free place to advertise for your store.

    The dude(ette) didn’t even post a link though from what I can see, so, the reaction is insane.

    Print on demand is easy, so, I’d think any artist who’s showing off their work online should have a printer that they’ve run off a few test prints with already ready to go, in case people are interested enough to ask about purchases, but, I’m not trying to moderate a magazine/community and prevent it from being a giant advertisement, so, ::shrug::


  • Yeah, I had a overall bad experience with everything being buggy and then even devices that weren’t connected to tailscale would start trying to ping the tailnet address instead of the local (wasn’t using their funky bridge subnets feature or whatever it’s called, so I don’t know why it would happen).

    Their magicDNS is cool in theory but caused me nothing but problems. Once I turned off their DNS and set up my own DNS server for it though, it’s gotten to basically be as seamless as they claim it’s supposed to be from the start. I’m no longer having any issues with it at all.


  • A couple people have suggested power tools … I’ll add that whatever battery platform you wind up going with (I went with Ryobi … good enough for my purposes), also pick up an adapter that’ll use the battery and give you AC power as well. Having an adapter that’ll power anything up to 150W has been a godsend.

    I’ve also got a bunch of flashlights/lanterns that use the same batteries … super convenient if we lose power and it’s great when we go camping too.

    I’ve got a “battery charging station” that’s just a plastic shelf, when you come in from the garage and it’s got the Ryobi batteries charging, but also our USB charging packs, rechargable AA/AAA/etc… batteries, and it’s also where we keep a lot of the tools so it makes it easy to find things in an emergency.

    -=-=-=- If your house has a sump pump but no battery backup (and I’d actually recommend the ones that are FULL replacements … so, you’ll basically have two pumps in the sump, one of which is connected to the battery system), I’d definitely recommend you getting one before you need it.

    -=-=-=- For myself, my AC unit has two capacitors. One burned up the first weekend we were in the house and one burned out a couple of years later.

    The first one, I didn’t know anything at the time and it cost a bit more than $600 (we thought we were getting screwed [and we were], but, it was 110deg F with fans running, so, we weren’t in a position to argue and the tech knew it). It’s a $20 part if you just buy it online and many times it will physically deform when it breaks, so even with no knowledge you might even have a physical indication that it’s broken. Go to your AC unit, give it a thorough cleaning (youtube the process) and then look up what capacitors your unit uses and buy a spare set and watch a quick video on how to replace them … super easy. It’s likely you’ll pay < $40 for however many you need and you won’t have to deal with a massive bill for a $20 part that you’ve just got to match up the ports and then move the blade terminals from one to the other AND you won’t have to deal with a hot house while you wait for a replacement since you’ll already have one and you’ll just have to buy a replacement for your spare, but, even if that takes a month to ship, it won’t be a worry.

    -=-=-=- A GOOD tape measurer. I’ve got a great Milwaukee one that has a magnet on the tip and it also holds without bending for a decent distance and it’s been glorious … always sucks when you’re trying to measure something and the tape is just flopping around not able to hold its shape.

    -=-=-=- There are a lot of studfinders out there, but I’ve found the ones that work the best basically just have a magnet that finds the nails/screws that are holding the drywall on. Once you’ve found a nail, you’ve found the stud.


  • I just followed their instructions and on 2 of the nodes in my cluster, I migrated all VMs/LXCs off and then did the upgrade and they went through without a hitch. For the last one, I just YOLO’d it and powered off the VMs/LXCs and upgraded it and it also went through without a hitch.

    One thing I did find interesting was the systemd-boot packages needed to be removed and were on 2/3 of the machines. I basically intentionally keep their config as close to identical as possible, so I have no clue why it was only needed on 2 of them.





  • It might help to know that Mark Twain was satirically using that word to juxtapose its offensive nature with Jim being the ONLY good adult in the book. It wasn’t simply “a product of it’s time” or anything like that.

    I’m not saying to belt it out loud and proud while reading the book, but at the very least Mark Twain was being deliberate on his usage of it and it wasn’t to be malicious and was in fact to highlight the humanity of Jim in the face of his oppression. Some will say that Twain fumbled on his execution by making Jim a characature of stereotypes, but, at least it was just mindless racism, for what that’s worth.

    ETA: To actually answer your question though “n-word” gives all the context you need, no need to say the word, it’s history is strong enough to be fully conveyed by “n-word” in almost all contexts when being spoken by a white person especially.


  • The security here is the WiFi password anything that connects to LAN gets a LAN vlan tag. but it’s not like anything that connects to any of the SSIDs can get the DHCP lease of some random device on any vlan cuz it got tagged before. Or am I missing something?

    That sounds accurate. I have all my devices assigned a specific IP address, based on their MAC address, but that’s only per-interface. The other interfaces aren’t aware of my assignments for each other.

    If I connect my phone to my LAN SSID, it’ll get its assigned IP, but if I connect it to the NOT [network of things, no internet access] SSID, it’ll get assigned a new address out of the DHCP pool because I haven’t assigned it an IP on that interface, until I assign it an IP. But, which VLAN it’s connected to will determine which IP its getting, and it still requires me to know the passwords for each SSID.

    I believe where you’re getting confused is that a some businesses (or homelabs) might use a RADIUS server which will be more like this: ONE_SINGLE_SSID-Broadcast -> Device connects -> RADIUS Server detects account/certificate/MAC -> RADIUS Server assigns interface -> Device connects to VLAN the RADIUS server granted it access to

    So, in that scenario, if the ONLY thing that’s being used to validate the access is the devices MAC address, just changing the MAC address will effectively grant a completely different level of access with nothing else changing. Most people in a homelab (and even plenty of larger businesses) aren’t running the infrastructure to do this though, they’re just effectively connecting a VLAN to a port and then that port can only be used to connect to that VLAN. They’re doing the same with the WiFi SSIDs where each SSID connects directly to the VLAN.

    Usually though, for places that are implementing the RADIUS server, they’ll also install a certificate on their devices and the certificate needs to be in place in order to get certain access otherwise the RADIUS server will authorize less permissive access or just won’t allow access at all. Or, it’ll also need a user to log in to gain additional access.

    For wired, the company may also implement port locking where the port will only allow a certain amount of MAC addresses to connect (presumably one unless there is also a VOICE VLAN with a phone being used, in which case it’d be two) where if you change your MAC address (or connect a different device), the port will lock and won’t power POE devices and won’t allow connectivity until an admin clears the lock. It’s possible that they may have multiple VLANs allowed on the port and client side you can change VLANs, but, this isn’t typically done on all ports, usually only on trusted ports or ports that need the multiple VLANs (my VM server for instance has access to a port that’ll allow multiple VLANs and I just enter the tag I need when I create the VM). This would be similar to your WiFi scenario, the port with the WAP connected to it will have access to multiple VLANs and then those WLANs just connect to the VLAN that they’re assigned to.

    TL;DR - Typically one wireless SSID connects to one VLAN and if you want to jump to the other VLAN you’d need to connect to the other SSID, so you still have the individual passwords protecting you. On wired, typically VLANs are assigned per port and you can’t jump between then, but where they aren’t, it should be in a planned way and not just every port having access to every VLAN. Bad implementations exist though, so, anything is possible.


  • VMs can also be live migrated to another server in the cluster with no downtime and backups don’t need to take the VM down to do their thing. If in the future you want to move to physical hardware, you can use something like Clonezilla to back it up (not needed often, but still, something to consider).

    Both have their places, but those factors are the main ones that come into play of when I want to use a VM or LXC.





  • I despise the ones where it’s basically like “get on the bus, we’re having mandatory fun!” and then you get going and it won’t finish until 2 hours past your quitting time, but it’s totally cool, because it’s a good time!

    OTOH, I’m not at all interested in sports and I’ve had a good time going to a baseball game and once a company took me to an arcade which was a lot of fun. Alcohol provided by the company.

    For me, as long as quitting time stays quitting time, I’m more or less happy even if I don’t actually like the event, but if you keep me away from my family, I’m unhappy and I can’t imagine how pissed the people who pick up their kids from work/school/etc… must have been.