I bought an OnlyKey a few months ago and love it.
noUsernamesLef7
Hey, I have a career question this week! I've been a sysadmin for the last 1.5 years (It's a small shop so everything security related is currently my responsibility). I'll soon be graduating with a BS in Cybersecurity & Information Assurance. I'm SSCP, CySA+, and PenTest+ certified. I want to end up in a penetration testing role. Once I graduate, should I start looking for pen testing gigs immediately or do you think I ought to get some experience directly in the security industry first? Would getting OSCP help my chances of moving directly to pen testing?
I disagree, i've found pretty adequate for my needs. I agree the UI isn't great, it reminds me of how Blender used to be, but I use it for all my parametric modelling for 3d printing stuff around the house. Fusion 360 is a better experience overall but to say FreeCAD is garbage seems extreme. If you need hobbyist software and care about your freedoms at all it's worth the slight inconvenience to use FreeCAD instead.
No kidding. I bought one on clearance from Walmart for 5$ and it was great for about a week, adequate for another month or two, and then became unusably bad after just under 6 months. Just buy a real non-stick pan, even cheap ones will last longer than the copper ones.
Lots of searching
A vertical mouse saved me from carpal tunnel syndrome. A few years ago I started developing wrist and elbow pain in my mouse arm along with the numbness. It was getting so bad I would take frequent breaks to ice my wrist and would wear a brace at night. I started looking for ergonomic mice and decided to try out a $15 Anker one from Amazon. I felt relief the day I started using it and within a few days the symptoms were gone entirely.
Who is going to tell him?
Updated some diagrams at work today using the newish D2 language. I've dabbled before with tools like D2 that generate diagrams from "code", like plantUML but D2 was really easy and made some great looking images.
Definitely looks more professional than the ASCII art diagrams they replaced, though I do find the ASCII ones charming.
Durability is a big concern for me as well. I bought a Pixel 2 at launch and had it until June of this year, almost 6 years. It was still in decent shape, but the battery had become unreliable and the cost of paying someone to replace it and fix the cracked screen was almost as much as a new in box Pixel 5. Hopefully my Pixel 5 will also last me a similarly long time.
What kind of problems have you had with your 6?
Well I know what I'm making for lunch now.