Elias Jachniuk

13 Followers
143 Following
350 Posts
Linux enthusiast working on the family in-house software.
Rustacean 🦀

A friend, @chloetankahhui has been speaking up against the proposal to enforce age verification at the OS level, and the QRTs to this shows the extent of naivety that a lot of people have.

No one who does hardware security believes that any system is bulletproof, but do you really think that circumventing these things will always be a simple firmware mod or hardware hack?

Let's dive in. /1

I have been off once again but this time for a very good reason: we got married! Let's get this story from the very start; it was quite a heavy work week and had to leave the next week for a business trip when @lilongueti insisted on celebrating our anniversary with a hike as usual. The whole thing felt pretty forced to me and everything that could go wrong went wrong, but when he started losing hope of having a good time I stood up and tried to turn the situation. For my good luck this change of attitude brought the most beautiful moment I could ever have on either a hike or an anniversary celebration:

Also, this was just an exploration of Finca La Venturosa route to Cerro Catedral, but they offer guided hikes on weekends if anyone is interested.

#retrocomputing folks: I'm trying to get a sense of the proportion of people here who are into a given class of retrocomputer today but didn't experience the machines when they first came on the market. I want everyone's input! Please boost!

This poll is about the early consumer home computers released between say 1977 and 1994.

Minicomputer poll: https://oldbytes.space/@fluidlogic/116026497511100991

32-bit home/personal computer poll: https://oldbytes.space/@fluidlogic/116026605156645610

I had access to an 8 or 16-bit computer during their heyday
75.8%
I did not have access to an 8 or 16-bit computer during their heyday
6.1%
8 or 16-bit computers had their heyday before I was born or when I was an infant
18.1%
Poll ended at .
Amin Girasol (@[email protected])

#retrocomputing and #vintagecomputing folks: I'm trying to get a sense of the proportion of people here who are into retrocomputing today but didn't experience specific classes of machines when they first came on the market. I want everyone's input! Please boost! This poll is about minicomputers. I've another poll for consumer home computers. [ ] I had access to a minicomputer during their heyday [ ] I did not have access to a minicomputer during their heyday [ ] Minicomputers had their heyday before I was born or when I was an infant

OldBytes Space - Mastodon
@rl_dane Nice, I always carry around an SSD with ventoy and both amd64 MX Linux and i386 antix, both with persistence and I like hitting random cyber cafes,
they tend to have hardware from that era and it's always fun to take them for a spin and see how far I can go with my daily work, which honestly with some swap on the SSD, even on slow USB speeds, and a bit of patience is enough for most of my activities
@dan_nanni ssh, find, grep
@vkc I've found this list of self host resources very useful over the years, much better than just googling stuff and hoping for the best
https://github.com/awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted
GitHub - awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted: A list of Free Software network services and web applications which can be hosted on your own servers

A list of Free Software network services and web applications which can be hosted on your own servers - awesome-selfhosted/awesome-selfhosted

GitHub

I felt that Microsoft Copilot, formerly known as Office, could use a mascot. So I asked Copilot to design something in the spirit of Clippy.

Let me introduce you to Sloppy, a cheerful slightly gooey assistant with glasses and a headset.

#Microslop

@lauren

I have a 1970s comic about this exact topic....

If you've been a Spotify Premium subscriber since it launched, you've given Spotify nearly $2000, and you own absolutely nothing.