Folks, recommend some people for me to follow. I see my masto usage going down and I'd like to revive it. No specific theme, anyone you like or think is cool to follow.
Please repost for reach.
I've been in and out of information security professionally, but somehow always have related projects. Mainly working with zeek and network level detection at the moment. SDR, cycling, and climbing enthusiast.
I boost a lot. Topics range far and wide from security and "the cybers" and may include politics, food, humor, science, law, nature, art, and other sundry unsavories. I occasionally post my own projects and thoughts.
Pronouns | he / him |
Github | https://github.com/jbaggs |
Age | Somewhere between Bianchi green and Soekris green |
@ai6yr @punissuer He is. Part of his training is doing split squats with 240 kg of weight.
Would absolutely not be the thing to do for a road cyclist that climbs hills and stuff, but he's a bullet on an oval.
Folks, recommend some people for me to follow. I see my masto usage going down and I'd like to revive it. No specific theme, anyone you like or think is cool to follow.
Please repost for reach.
@sundogplanets Looking at that I somehow got the urge to search with the term "goat stack" online. I am happy to say it did not go as bad as I thought it might. (Wholesome pictures of goats standing on things, and no "urban dictionary" reinterpretation.)
Stuff like this:
https://www.bossysfeltworks.com/post/farm-stacks-real-and-imagined
Chickens on a piglet or lamb, a goose on a goat, a lamb on a border collie... the possibilities are endless! We have a lot of fun coming up with combinations, and have also delighted in customers dreaming up combinations of their own. You would think this is just a figment of our collective imagination, but we are here to let you know these farm stacks are a real thing! Behold a few photos from the Lum family farm...First off, here's one that we find extra delightful: goats Puck and Daisy make