An experimental category for Megatopics that grew from the Sidebar
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@dkf said in A fool and his not-really-money are soon parted:
any con where you are feeling excluded (intentionally or otherwise) is a terrible experience
I'm sure any con will feel right at home on a crypto con.
Code Snippet of the Day - self-submissions for code snippets that shouldn't really exist.
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@izzion said in Visual Studio WTfs:
I wouldn't want to be on either side of the bet that Framework 4.8 is going to be available in Windows 12.
I can fairly confidently bet that it won’t be; if it ships with the OS it’ll be 4.8.1 or later.
(It will be… interesting… if they put .NET Framework 4.x on the standalone-component train like 3.5 but not the VB6 runtime.)
Side Bar: Because more things make us ask WTF than just code.
Post your own WTFs that used to also briefly appear in the side bar on The Daily WTF website.
Christopher Plain / Apr 19
NASA Veteran’s Propellantless Propulsion Drive That Physics Says Shouldn’t Work Just Produced Enough Thrust to Overcome Earth’s Gravity - The Debrief
A veteran NASA scientist says his company has tested a propellantless propulsion drive technology that produced one Earth gravity of thrust.
produced enough thrust to overcome earths gravity
give us millions of dollars to demo this in space.
You don’t need to demo this in space. If your shit was real and produced even a tiny fraction of the thrust required to “overcome earth’s gravity”, you could easily measure it on earth.
Christopher Plain is a Science Fiction and Fantasy novelist and Head Science Writer at The Debrief.
Of course.
Not watched the video, but the best printer I ever owned was an HP LaserJet III that I bought second-hand, early this century, when it was already approaching ten years old. Worked fine, every time, no hassle at all. The only reason I eventually replaced it was because some parts of the feed mechanism had worn out so it wouldn’t reliably pull the paper through anymore, and good luck finding spares for that.
@LaoC said in Hacking News:
I see no reason to switch. Supposedly the algorithm is faster (which doesn't matter at all in SSH), but DJB & Tanja Lange say it's crap and quite a few things coming out of NIST turned out to be smelly so I would prefer not to.
The https://safecurves.cr.yp.to/ (by DJB & Lange) lists the NIST P-256 and P-384 as manipulatable, because they include an unexplained pseudo-random constant, but it does not list the P-521. It does list “E-521”, which someone said is the same curve here, but https://neuromancer.sk/ doesn't seem to agree (P-521, E-521).
@boomzilla said in Wow! "NEW" Microsoft Teams!:
@Gern_Blaanston said in Wow! "NEW" Microsoft Teams!:
The other part of this meme that isn’t obvious is how it demonstrates Microsoft’s ongoing campaign of aligning interface consistency.
@Steve_The_Cynic said in I Hate Jira Because ...:
@dkf said in I Hate Jira Because ...:
And yes, JIRA encourages this by its design.
I wouldn't necessarily say, "encourages this," but "facilitates this" or "makes this too easy" are definitely on the cards.
Atlassian absolutely encourages you to use JIRA in these ways if you can stomach any of the marketing shite they serve up.
@Zerosquare said in United Airlines: the airline we love to hate, but we can't agree on why:
Apr 8 / lifestyle
Flight diverted after dog poops on board: 'Smell never quite went...
"First class toilet declared unusable as the dog mess was apparently unresolved in there. Food went bad while on the ground so very few snacks left,” a Reddit post read.
See? This time it's not our fault!
I mean, sure, but I'm a gun nut and if 999 times in a row I handle a firearm and it is my fault when it discharges and blows someone's head off, but on time number 1,000 it isn't, I am still going to be blamed.
We as humans follow trends.
@Parody said in Disk too full to delete files; Delete files to free up space:
Meanwhile, I still shut my computers down when I'm done using them...
My wife's father does that. He turns on his computer long enough to check/send e-mail and do whatever he needs to do right at that minute. Then shuts it down.
@cvi said in "I swear to you, I did exactly as you told me......":
@TwelveBaud said in "I swear to you, I did exactly as you told me......":
Free beats 0.3¢ every day.
Further costs savings: measure voltage over the speaker, so it can act as a (terrible) microphone. Remove one of the buttons in favour of the user screaming at the device.
I feel like I would be willing to pay more for this feature.
@Bulb Also A Function Äpp can use a container (have never done so). Anyways, this is just for playing around, and collecting some experience.
And the experience is ... um ... you know the title of this web site...
@topspin said in Abode unCreative Suite (includes hoodie!):
@Atazhaia said in Abode unCreative Suite (includes hoodie!):
Called it.
@topspin said in Abode unCreative Suite (includes hoodie!):
@boomzilla said in Abode unCreative Suite (includes hoodie!):
Minus the cost of the hoodies!
From the screenshot: "I have concerns at this point".
@joshmid747 said in Super Cow Powers:
Only just rediscovered this on my computer, been ages since I have done this one.
Well, well, well .... if it isn't Jo Shmid.
@Atazhaia said in Linux on the Desktop? A long way off... :
@DogsB looks around the room I count two penguinsdesktop Linux users in this group of 20. I could bring it to 20 by force, but I am evilkind. For now.
Forgive them for they know not what they do.
@dkf said in Where has all the backward compatibility gone?:
@Benjamin-Hall said in Where has all the backward compatibility gone?:
@dkf said in Where has all the backward compatibility gone?:
@Benjamin-Hall Can we defend the kittens and puppies anyway? Asking for a pyromaniac friend.
I mean, I'm fine with them as long as they're not near me OR (not XOR) hypoallergenic. And not noisy, filthy, or otherwise unpleasant. I hold no ill-will towards even the ones I'm not fine with, just can't defend them while they're like that.
You find yourself able to defend them in the abstract, but the realities of fur allergies are unfortunate. Particularly as kittens tend to go 110% into purring...
Purring I'm fine with. It's dogs barking or howling that I dislike, at least if it's constant. I've got neighbors whose dog will sometimes bark like it's being murdered for an hour straight.
@JBert said in Conversations overheard:
@Yamikuronue said:"We started running a promotion on X/XX, which has now ended. We did not set it up using the Promotion Tracker. However, we now want the data. Is there some way to get the data that would have been collected by the Promotion Tracker tool had we elected to use it?"
Hmmm, there was some old quote about this. I think it went something like this:
On two occasions have I been asked, 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you fail to put any figures into the machine, will the right answers come out?' I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question.
I don't think it's quite as bad as that. The former was due to not having a clear understanding of how the Promotion Tracker works. (URL's with a marker, etc.) The questioner may have wondered if it was just a data analysis tool.
The Babbage one seemed to have no understanding of the most fundamental grasp of how a computer works. What makes it most amusing is that the questioner thought it was a gotcha. The modern equivalent would be, "Then why are apes still around?"
Eric Berger / Mar 7 / Space
After Astra loses 99 percent of its value, founders take rocket firm private
First you burn the cash, then comes the crash.
If only the people getting soaked by this were venture capitalists...
@Atazhaia said in Willy's Chocolate Experience:
It is indeed amazing stuff, and meme-worthy.
Feb 27
What Was The Sad Glasgow 'Willy Wonka Experience' And Who's 'Billy Coull'? The Disastrous Event Explained
Scottish children were anticipating a world of pure imagination, and got a world of disappointment instead.
In the wake of the disastrous event, a ... group of angry Glaswegians, currently 1,200 strong,
...Now things are gonna get interesting!
In the wake of the disastrous event, a Facebook group of angry Glaswegians, currently 1,200 strong,
@sockpuppet7 said in Is Uber the *worst* .com currently?:
in my locality it was unfair laws, with most cab licenses owned by city lawmakers, and cabs being priced as a luxury, with old cars and rude drivers
the owner of the license would hire a driver to work for him, and the profit, doing nothing, was better than the average pay of an engineer like us
That's the sort of situation where I'd expect Uber to do well, cracking a market where prices were massively out of line with service levels. It is the differential between prices and service levels that provides the opportunity, the competitive edge. Markets where there isn't that dysfunction will be harder (that's why they've found the UK mostly hard going, especially outside London; not impossible but very little to gain advantage with).
Status: I'm really confused. For some reason uBlock is not keeping YouTube on the whitelist.
I click the button, it adds www.youtube.com to the whitelist (verified in settings) all is good. Open a new tab, it's gone again.
Good. I feel my hate growing.
@Bulb said in Art Wars: The AI Menace:
The muscles that do most of the work are the back ones as the arches spreads out their arms.
That's certainly how Japanese archery (Kyūdō) does it. Most western archers don't use their backs so much (though they probably should be).
@dcon said in What's an image file?:
@Arantor said in What's an image file?:
Mine says F12
Prt Scr
and in a fancy edgy tech font because it's an MSI laptop. And naturally it has the LED lightup thing, so when I press FN, the text goes orange.
Well, actually, my MS keyboard is PrtScr
SysRq
The Lenovo has a snipping image under the PrtSc.
Standards. Yup. One for every manufacturercomputer and keyboard model!
My Logitech keyboard dumbed it down even more:
(with wooden table for extra pointz)
@Steve_The_Cynic I can’t even claim that, since I had a break of breaking it around 2008-2010, but the underlying point is +3 Immunity to Bad Headlines.
@dkf said in Visual Basic for Quantum Computers:
@robo2 said in Visual Basic for Quantum Computers:
I'm allowed to WFH half the time, but I'm not allowed to do that from a different country (for tax reasons).
If you're in another country temporarily but still resident in then I'd expect the tax authorities to be relaxed about where you're physically located.
I actually had the need to check the laws due to my cross-country situation, and the answer is that it all depends on the specific tax treaty between the countries involved. The usual - but not universal - rule is that your tax residency is the country you spent more than half of a year (183 days), and if there wasn't one, then your home country. In particular, this rule applies across all of EU. So it would be fine for @robo2 to work abroad, as long as they don't do it too much.
Please don't tell anyone I only spend 165 days in USA in 2020.
@Tsaukpaetra It's the needful-don't-doers. There's going to be someone in a small group insulated from all users who has the power to press the Button and make everything work... but they don't want to (and definitely don't want anyone who might qualify as a user near them!) and nobody outside their coterie really knows who to pester in person to make it happen despite their passive-aggressive resistance.
@Mason_Wheeler said in Oh, the stupidity of Firefox:
@Gern_Blaanston Serious question. If you're going to use ambiguous acronyms, you need to explain them, because that's the only ESR I know of, so I have no idea what you're talking about here.
This is perhaps the funniest thing you've ever posted after getting upset that people don't know obscure shit you post about.
@dkf said in Guy brings down thousands of npm builds:
@Tsaukpaetra said in Guy brings down thousands of npm builds:
I'm amazed that there was a systemically enforced policy to disallow deletion of a package if it so happens that some other package happens to reference it.
I'm more surprised that there isn't a check to see whether the dependency graph is a DAG.
There probably is at the point of resolution in npm itself.
But note that “everything” is really a meta package that points to half a dozen other packages that just hard-list everything else, built by scraping the npm registry.
Which means it must be doing something DAG like somewhere because everything-registry/everything -> everything-registry/chunk0 -> list of dependencies, such that everything itself only has 5 dependencies (chunk0 through chunk4) and those individually have all the dependencies.
@loopback0 said in Mostly not internet, and mostly just as shit as you make it:
Who the fuck is buying this?
Like with most of the other IoT garbage, idiots. Idiots are buying it.
Also, that if day > 20 && month > 10? It's false now. The train that broke on December 21 is fine now.
Noworoczny cud. Zepsuty Impuls sam się naprawił 1 stycznia
Należący do województwa lubuskiego pociąg Impuls, który przestał się uruchamiać 21 grudnia, od 1 stycznia ponownie działa bez żadnej zewnętrznej ingerencji. Dokładnie taki przebieg wydarzeń przewidzieli hakerzy z Dragon Sector, którzy analizowali jego oprogramowanie.
I like that one of the theories about why some setups were still working and others were not is that the related spec says you need to check the certificate's validity relative to a date. What date? The spec doesn't specify, so some systems might check that it was valid when everything was generated (still works) and others check vs. the current date (fails).
@Gern_Blaanston
Almost 20 years back? Not everything was remote accessible, or accessible remotely for external consultants. The software required dedicated hardware cards. This often resulted in different servers being used and general hands off from IT. Sometimes because they where marked simply as Telco.
The times I walked around with a borrowed IT badge, got left in a room I didn't have access to or IT blocked a door from shutting are countless.
Sometimes, in small companies, they didn't give a flying fuck. Other times, in banks or international institutions, it was lawful good rule breaking. Like, here have my badge because we are still battling internal why my colleagues don't have access.
@GuyWhoKilledBear said in PANTONE® dictates the colour of 2022!:
@hungrier said in PANTONE® dictates the colour of 2022!:
@dkf said in PANTONE® dictates the colour of 2022!:
@MrL said in PANTONE® dictates the colour of 2022!:
Disgusting
Makes you wonder if Pantone are based in Boston.
New Jersey, the Boston of states
Posted from Boston, the New Jersey of cities.
@BernieTheBernie said in Visual Studio WTF:
@Tsaukpaetra said in Visual Studio WTF:
Status: I am in magical unicorn land again...
In such cases, I look at the output from Build, and search for the first (!) error there. No, not the second, third or what ever. Frist. Resolve that, and the rest will follow quickly.
It's not getting far enough for the first error to make sense, but I'll see if I still have it up on Monday to check for your benefit.
@Steve_The_Cynic
Note We recommend that you do not attempt to manually update to Windows 11, version 23H2 using the Update now button or the Media Creation Tool until this issue has been resolved and the safeguard removed.
Good job I manually updated by directly downloading the .msu file and installing it then!
I have Copilot disabled though so it's not going to be an issue either way.
@Tsaukpaetra said in Antigrammatical gif:
I am extremely disappointed they did not provide the jip that causes this when Grammarly is installed.
Pics or it didn't happen.
I appreciate the ones that require a password unlock to unpack the codes for this reason. Even though I have copies of my vaults in various places, still need to know Standard Secure local static 2019 password to unlock it.
@HardwareGeek That works as a reason. (I'm not a big fan of git, but I use it at $JOB because that's what $JOB uses. Sigh. At least I know how to make it behave itself without it totally fucking up in all directions.)