At work, when I did desktop support, the number of people who would just hit their power bar when they left every day…
Canadian, sysadmin, trans rights are human rights, puncha-the-nazis, cats are pretty great, GNU Terry Pratchett.
At work, when I did desktop support, the number of people who would just hit their power bar when they left every day…
It goes to show that people are complex, and contain multitudes. Cherrypicking isn’t a bad thing. The older I get, the harder I find it to get along with strangers, because I’ll have some point of contention with them. :/
I can’t speak for the others but Dawkins has fallen into an anti-trans rabbithole lately and has said some pretty hateful stuff. :(
Linux has had a long history of worms and viruses, fortunately (sorta) thanks to its server legacy. Dumb and lazy server admins have given it pretty good ‘secure by default’ behaviours and cultures.
Desktop users though: whole different set of challenges.
Among my friends it’s more like 30%
These things should absolutely scream on Linux. Looking forward to playing with it. Windows hasn’t historically done all that well with non-x86 chipsets out of the gate.
I have crowdsec on a bunch of servers. It’s great and I love that I’m feeding my data to the swarm.
I don’t even have a licence. I’d take it. Those gave pretty okay resale value. ^_-
Don’t worry, they made one for you. :p
!thelongdark@lemmy.ca, which put out a new content patch with some very nice immersion fixes this week. The new zone is very challenging.
Some of that (not all) is anti EV propaganda, both funded by competitors or exaggerations and sometimes outright fabrication by people who (justifiably) dislike Musk.
Far longer, with a trust and prudent investment.
LaserJet 4 was a tank. Everything since has been various flavours of mediocre. Buy Brother.
Oh, yay! I’m a helper \o/
I haven’t tried this, but maybe ssh -t "rm /var/cache/apt/archives/*deb"
or something like to clear up some space would work.
One thing Debian introduced recently: apt upgrade --without-new-pkgs
and they recommend that before a full dist-upgrade. I think it’s made a pretty big difference in the upgrade smoothness, eliminating some possibly-breaking package upgrades.
edit: I say recently but I mean new-to-me
I’d expect they’d ‘adopt’ the tools and redistribute them under the GPL, if they did.
It would be cool if the GNU project sponsored a new updated ‘standard’ set of tools though.
I’ve been using rspamd for a while. It may be extensible to do token based classification like you want but it may take some work.