towerful

joined 1 year ago
[–] towerful 3 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (1 children)

As a recent YT premium-tryer, it's amazing how many ads they put in that aren't obviously adverts - comparing between non-premium and premium browsing.
Not sure I'll keep YT premium beyond the free trial, until I find more decent content producers. Even then, it's skipping those video's paid promotion segments.
So it's like paying for a streaming platform to not get ads... But still getting ads

[–] towerful 21 points 3 months ago

Even the shitty mobile ads of "someone watching prerecorded gameplay and commenting it".
How obvious can you be?! "Oh wow, these 2 different people playing EXACTLY the same and saying almost the same thing".
That's not an ad.
Never mind that the gameplay in the ad is an extremely minor part of the game. The rest is some sort of city-builder with mtx shortcuts.

It's just whaling

[–] towerful 5 points 3 months ago

Ah, I think it's like "keep track of 7 items, the 8th might push something else out" ( https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Magical_Number_Seven,_Plus_or_Minus_Two ).

So like mind-map-complexity.
Like, when you are trying to figure out some bullshit OOP inheritance, you are 9 levels deep and have no idea what the original problem was, but you feel like you have made a connection to the solution, but now you have to backtrack everything (or figure out where your last edit was) to try and figure out what that connection actually means and what you have to do now

[–] towerful 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I haven't tried this yet, but I'm excited for it's potential.
Having a bunch of RES-like enhancements with toggles, and the ability for users to (manually & anonymously, via a button) "submit" their preferences to a central database would be an awesome way to gather Lemmy user feedback on various upcoming features.
This would give fantastic options for Lemmy developers to implement, popularity of features, and easy ways for users to choose what they want (as long as any permanent Lemmy implementations come with an enable/disable toggle)

[–] towerful 5 points 3 months ago (1 children)

An extension is a great way for users to try features before companies implement them.
I have huge respect for games that enable modding, then - respectfully - incorporate mod QoL features into the main game. It shows they are listening to the community.

An extension is actually a great way to propose a feature, allow users to try it, and if it's popular then you have a great case for devs to implement it.

And I wish that Reddit had spent time & money implementing RES features natively. It was basically a "Reddit but useable" feature list.

[–] towerful 2 points 3 months ago (2 children)

If the router/gateway/network (IE not local) firewall is blocking forwarding unknown IPv6, then it's a compromised server connected to via IPv6 that has the ability to leverage the exploit (IE your windows client connecting to a compromised server that is actively exploiting this IPv6 CVE).

It's not like having IPv6 enabled on a windows machine automatically makes it instantly exploitable by anyone out there.
Routers/firewalls will only forward IPv6 for established connections, so your windows machine has to connect out.

Unless you are specifically forwarding to a windows machine, at which point you are intending that windows machine to be a server.

Essentially the same as some exploit in some service you are exposing via NAT port forwarding.
Maybe a few more avenues of exploit.

Like I said. Why would a self-hoster or homelabber use windows for a public facing service?!

[–] towerful 9 points 3 months ago (1 children)

He measured on a heartbeat to ensure it was as big as possible

[–] towerful 12 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Implied +/- 10 thou accuracy isn't appropriate.

[–] towerful 14 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (4 children)

What a great origin. I Googled it, and it now means "to add your opinion".

  1. Seinen Senf dazugeben

Literal translation: To add your mustard to it.

Actual meaning: To give your opinion on something./To give your two cents.

Where there are sausages, there also must be mustard. If you want to ask someone for their opinion and sound like a fluent speaker when doing it, you better invite them to add their mustard.

https://www.mondly.com/blog/german-idioms/

In the process, I found some other great German proverbs with hilarious literal translations.

Literal translation: To talk around the hot porridge.
Literal translation: To ask for an extra sausage.
Literal translation: I believe I spider. (Edit: I believe I spin, see comment).
Literal translation: To have tomatoes on one’s eyes.
Literal translation: I can only understand ‘train station.’.
Literal translation: You’re walking on my cookie.
Literal translation: The bear dances there.
Literal translation: Everything has an end. Only the sausage has two.

But, I guess that's always the case with idioms. Their literal translation/meaning is useless. Regardless, I find German ones particularly titular

[–] towerful 9 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

It's what Rick Peck - the best agent on planet earth - moved heaven and earth to deliver to Tugg Speedman. Truly a beautiful & inspirational documentary

[–] towerful 7 points 3 months ago (4 children)

How many people are running public facing windows servers in their homelab/self-hosted environment?

And just because "it's worked so far" isn't a great reason to ignore new technology.
IPv6 is useful for public facing services. You don't need a single proxy that covers all your http/s services.
It's also significantly better for P2P applications, as you no longer need to rely on NAT traversal bodges or insecure uPTP type protocols.

If you are unlucky enough to be on IPv4 CGNAT but have IPv6 available, then you are no longer sharing reputation with everyone else on the same public IPv4 address. Also, IPv6 means you can get public access instead of having to rely on some RPoVPN solution.

[–] towerful 81 points 3 months ago (6 children)

At one point, blue LEDs were super expensive because of their difficult production.
So any product that has a blue LED was considered premium. I guess they were also considered futuristic and high-tech.
Somehow, this is still in the mind of some manufacturers.
All I want is a barely-visible-in-soft-daylight diffused/frosted red or amber LED.
But no, it's always some 5w lensed blue LED at somehow produces a tighter beam of horrendous blue light that's brighter than most flashlights.

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