i may have to start to slow down my pace with this heat and humidity going up. the last mile of this one hurt a bit. the outdoor runs have really been draining my energy, too.
#running
i may have to slow down my pace with this heat and humidity. going up the last mile of this one hurt a bit. the outdoor runs have really been draining my energy, too.
#running
i may have to slow down my pace with this heat and humidity. going up the last mile of this one hurt a bit. the outdoor runs have really been draining my energy, too.
#running
i may have to slow down my pace with this heat and humidity. going up the last mile of this one hurt a bit. the outdoor runs have really been draining my energy, too.
#running
Alternative message me on Salty IM (https://salty.im) at
prologic@mills.io
Alternative message me on Salty IM (https://salty.im) at
prologic@mills.io
What happened so far:
- Internet outage since early in the morning. Still going on.
- Unable to reach a human being at my ISP, so I hope they mean it when the computer voice says "we know it, we're on it". 🤣
- systemd (PID 1) crashed. Might be partially my fault, but meh.
I take this as a sign to not do any computer stuff today. 🤣
What happened so far:
- Internet outage since early in the morning. Still going on.
- Unable to reach a human being at my ISP, so I hope they mean it when the computer voice says "we know it, we're on it". 🤣
- systemd (PID 1) crashed. Might be partially my fault, but meh.
I take this as a sign to not do any computer stuff today. 🤣
What happened so far:
- Internet outage since early in the morning. Still going on.
- Unable to reach a human being at my ISP, so I hope they mean it when the computer voice says "we know it, we're on it". 🤣
- systemd (PID 1) crashed. Might be partially my fault, but meh.
I take this as a sign to not do any computer stuff today. 🤣
What happened so far:
- Internet outage since early in the morning. Still going on.
- Unable to reach a human being at my ISP, so I hope they mean it when the computer voice says "we know it, we're on it". 🤣
- systemd (PID 1) crashed. Might be partially my fault, but meh.
I take this as a sign to not do any computer stuff today. 🤣
1. The "Story of my life" _(the less serious answer)_
2. Being "The Black Sheep" from the old tale ? _(the serious answer)_
1. The "Story of my life" _(the less serious answer)_
2. Being "The Black Sheep" from the old tale ? _(the serious answer)_
>(..) 🧐
>(..) 🧐
> Deeply questionable legality aside, do any of you use Copilot? Has it had any material impact on your programming work? Is its use allowed by your employer, or do you only use it for personal projects at home?
No never and I never will!
> Deeply questionable legality aside, do any of you use Copilot? Has it had any material impact on your programming work? Is its use allowed by your employer, or do you only use it for personal projects at home?
No never and I never will!
> As an aside, my opinion on GitHub Copilot is clear – it’s quite possibly the largest case of copyright infringement in human history, and in its current incarnation it should not be allowed to continue to operate. As I wrote over a year ago:
I wrote about this three years ag! https://www.prologic.blog/2021/07/11/why-i-no.html
> As an aside, my opinion on GitHub Copilot is clear – it’s quite possibly the largest case of copyright infringement in human history, and in its current incarnation it should not be allowed to continue to operate. As I wrote over a year ago:
I wrote about this three years ag! https://www.prologic.blog/2021/07/11/why-i-no.html
What do we call it when you get to engage in discussion over topics you find in these "filter bubbles" with a different viewpoint, only to be shot down, overridden, or met with other arguments that support the existing "filter bubble"'s state?
What do we call it when you get to engage in discussion over topics you find in these "filter bubbles" with a different viewpoint, only to be shot down, overridden, or met with other arguments that support the existing "filter bubble"'s state?
> Consequently, users become separated from information that disagrees with their viewpoints, effectively isolating them in their own cultural or ideological bubbles, resulting in a limited and customized view of the world.
> Consequently, users become separated from information that disagrees with their viewpoints, effectively isolating them in their own cultural or ideological bubbles, resulting in a limited and customized view of the world.
#running #treadmill
#running #treadmill
#running #treadmill
#running #treadmill
Nota num prédio em francês, que começa por "Devant la recrudescence de cambriolages au sein de votre coproprieté..."
Nota num prédio em francês, que começa por "Devant la recrudescence de cambriolages au sein de votre coproprieté..."
Copying data from the NAS’s encrypted ZFS pool to the USB disk’s encrypted btrfs runs at ~20 MByte/s. That is for a single 1 GB file of random data. Cold caches,
sync included.That same USB disk with the same btrfs can sustain ~75 MByte/s when I use it on my workstation (i7-3770).
And indeed, the
aes flag does not show up in the output of lscpu on the NAS.I’ll try to tweak some things about this, but it might be time for an upgrade … 🫤 (Or I’ll have to re-think the entire thing somehow.)
Copying data from the NAS’s encrypted ZFS pool to the USB disk’s encrypted btrfs runs at ~20 MByte/s. That is for a single 1 GB file of random data. Cold caches,
sync included.That same USB disk with the same btrfs can sustain ~75 MByte/s when I use it on my workstation (i7-3770).
And indeed, the
aes flag does not show up in the output of lscpu on the NAS.I’ll try to tweak some things about this, but it might be time for an upgrade … 🫤 (Or I’ll have to re-think the entire thing somehow.)
Copying data from the NAS’s encrypted ZFS pool to the USB disk’s encrypted btrfs runs at ~20 MByte/s. That is for a single 1 GB file of random data. Cold caches,
sync included.That same USB disk with the same btrfs can sustain ~75 MByte/s when I use it on my workstation (i7-3770).
And indeed, the
aes flag does not show up in the output of lscpu on the NAS.I’ll try to tweak some things about this, but it might be time for an upgrade … 🫤 (Or I’ll have to re-think the entire thing somehow.)
Copying data from the NAS’s encrypted ZFS pool to the USB disk’s encrypted btrfs runs at ~20 MByte/s. That is for a single 1 GB file of random data. Cold caches,
sync included.That same USB disk with the same btrfs can sustain ~75 MByte/s when I use it on my workstation (i7-3770).
And indeed, the
aes flag does not show up in the output of lscpu on the NAS.I’ll try to tweak some things about this, but it might be time for an upgrade … 🫤 (Or I’ll have to re-think the entire thing somehow.)
Nestes dias conto tootar sobre o evento a partir da minha conta anglófona @rlafuente@rlafuente. Até já*
https://libregraphicsmeeting.org/2024
#lgm2024
Nestes dias conto tootar sobre o evento a partir da minha conta anglófona @rlafuente@rlafuente. Até já*
https://libregraphicsmeeting.org/2024
#lgm2024