[-] renzev@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

Born too late to conquer the world
Born too early to explore the stars
Born just in time to have edits of my shitposts shared on a niche online community 😤

(Jokes aside, I'm glad you liked/hated my meme enough to make an edit :-) )

[-] renzev@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

Thank you for the detailed response, very informative. You make a really good point about centralized logging, I can see how that can be very helpful when you run A LOT of different server process on one machine. I get centralized logging as a bonus of running everything in Docker, but I can see how it is nice to have logging as part of the init system if you want to run a lot of services natively.

[-] renzev@lemmy.world 5 points 3 days ago

Out of curiosity, why exactly do you not have a choice in not running systemd? Is it company policy / are they clients' machines?

[-] renzev@lemmy.world 15 points 3 days ago

I'm more of a runit guy, but I started using Alpine recently, and I have to say, openrc is also pretty nice!

[-] renzev@lemmy.world 18 points 3 days ago

Fstab is for critical partitions

Hush everyone, don't tell this guy about noauto, it'll burst his bubble

[-] renzev@lemmy.world 11 points 3 days ago

I've gotten into quite a lot of systemd-related flame wars so far, and what strikes me is that I haven't heard a single reason why systemd is good and should be used in favor of openrc/sysvinit/whatever. The only arguments I hear in favor of systemd, even from the its diehard defenders, are justifications why it's not that bad. Not once have I heard someone advocate for systemd with reasoning that goes likes "Systemd is superior to legacy init systems because you can do X much easier" or "systemd is more secure because it's resistant against Y attack vector". It's always "Linus says it's allright" or "binary logfiles aren't a problem, you can just get them from journald instead of reading the file", or "everyone already uses it".

When it comes to online discourse, systemd doesn't have advocates, it has apologists.

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submitted 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) by renzev@lemmy.world to c/linuxmemes@lemmy.world
[-] renzev@lemmy.world 38 points 4 days ago

tldr is great. Basically a crowd-sourced alternative to man with much more concise entries. Example:

$ tldr dhcpcd

  DHCP client.
  More information: <https://roy.marples.name/projects/dhcpcd>.

  Release all address leases:

      sudo dhcpcd --release

  Request the DHCP server for new leases:

      sudo dhcpcd --rebind
[-] renzev@lemmy.world 6 points 4 days ago

Why is the daemon smoking? Are they taking a break from their duties? Is this what happens when I run rc-service sshd stop?

[-] renzev@lemmy.world 20 points 4 days ago

Releasing into a saturated market

zero unique features compared to competition

not free to play like the competition

Boring, generic-looking characters

zero marketing/promotion before release

No linux support

I mean is it really a mystery why it was dead on arrival?

[-] renzev@lemmy.world 29 points 5 days ago

Teams is such a confusing app. To start off, what is it meant to be? A frontend for onedrive? A chat app? A videocall app? It's like microsoft's attemp to make their own everything app. What was wrong with Skype? Actually, Teams shows up as "skypeforlinux" (complete with a Skype icon) in Pavucontrol, so is the videocalling part of teams just a re-packaged skype? Why does the web version of teams have its own integrated Excel which is slightly different from standard web excel? It feels like the UI was specifically designed to mislead. There is a list of icons on the left that allow you to switch between different contexts in the app. The visual design makes it look like a set of radiobuttons, except clicking on some of them twice does a different action... There is a home screen, and then also a second SUPER HOME screen!? I can't even get angry it at for being a slow bloated jumble of spyware like the rest of microsoft's garbage (which it is), I just feel a sense of morbid fascination every time I'm forced to use it. It feels like an AI-generated app from a future where AI is much more capable but still utterly fails at understanding humans. It's the uncanny valley of user experience.

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submitted 1 week ago by renzev@lemmy.world to c/memes@lemmy.world
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It's impressive how duckduckgo manages to be so much better than bing despite being a frontend for bing

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AI's take on XML (lemmy.world)
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I heard some people say theyre the same thing, but others are adamant that they have different meanings. Which is it?

[-] renzev@lemmy.world 117 points 1 month ago

There's something so on-the-nose about having "with ads" as part of a subscription tier's official name. For decades companies have been coming up with euphemisms for their low-cost services (e.g. "economy class" on airlines, "community edition" for freemium software). But now here we are with Disney pretty much saying "Go watch ads you poor bitch". It's the death of a euphemism. They're selling a crappy service, and they aren't afraid to say it.

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Many such cases (lemmy.world)
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submitted 2 months ago by renzev@lemmy.world to c/latex@programming.dev
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submitted 2 months ago by renzev@lemmy.world to c/privacy@lemmy.ml

I've just been playing around with https://browserleaks.com/fonts . It seems no web browser provides adequate protection for this method of fingerprinting -- in both brave and librewolf the tool detects rather unique fonts that I have installed on my system, such as "IBM Plex" and "UD Digi Kyokasho" -- almost certainly a unique fingerprint. Tor browser does slightly better as it does not divulge these "weird" fonts. However, it still reveals that the google Noto fonts are installed, which is by far not universal -- on a different machine, where no Noto fonts are installed, the tool does not report them.

For extra context: I've tested under Linux with native tor browser and flatpak'd Brave and Librewolf.

What can we do to protect ourselves from this method of fingerprinting? And why are all of these privacy-focused browsers vulnerable to it? Is work being done to mitigate this?

[-] renzev@lemmy.world 259 points 6 months ago

A technology that was made To Stop Criminals™ being used against a political whistleblower? Color me surprised! (thanks for sharing the link btw, didn't know about that)

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renzev

joined 9 months ago