ulterno

joined 3 months ago
[–] ulterno@programming.dev 5 points 7 hours ago

The bottom-most bridge was built around the 12th century. How the hell they managed to build stuff like this way back then staggers me.

I find it hard to relate with this sentence. That's just 3 bridges on the top of what seems like a natural rock formation, right? With 2 being arches and the top one being a modern-ish structure.

No matter how deep it is, it's narrow enough to just move a prebuild wooden foot bridge used for people to go around constructing the thing.

[–] ulterno@programming.dev 3 points 23 hours ago

Is it not also because it was easier to feign ignorance for the time the laws were passed?
And that nobody thought of Tor, while at the same time, leechers who don't seed are actually being worse for the Torrent?

[–] ulterno@programming.dev 74 points 23 hours ago* (last edited 23 hours ago) (8 children)

Well, that's how it tends to be in most places.
You don't get caught for downloading; you get caught for uploading.

Using a similar logic to distribution via DVDs. Only the seller gets into trouble. The buyer does not.

[–] ulterno@programming.dev 0 points 23 hours ago

AUR definitely has given me better exp than PPA though. And I don't use PPA at home.

But I tend to choose git clone and build manually (without a PKGBUILD) for quite a lot of things, both in Arch-based and Debian.

[–] ulterno@programming.dev -2 points 23 hours ago

I prefer copying the text on the terminal and pasting it, due to most platforms using jpeg compression on png uploads, making written text worse.

[–] ulterno@programming.dev 9 points 1 day ago

This was by far the best way to explain current slang.
I got all of it No Tea

[–] ulterno@programming.dev 1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Well, I couldn't find anything else out of it, but maybe you can. Here's the rest of their faeces. 💩 💩 💩 💩

[–] ulterno@programming.dev -1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

If I knew you could actually download those, I might have considered buying from them.
I thought it was a web/kindle only thing.

[–] ulterno@programming.dev 5 points 2 days ago (3 children)

Here I recovered a bit from their faeces.

|  .  ⚬  (  ◁  ⟂
[–] ulterno@programming.dev 4 points 4 days ago

I guess I'll lose your arms and your legs

[–] ulterno@programming.dev 0 points 5 days ago

Let's go by: Because they didn't learn to use a screw driver properly, they went with the hammer.

Also, alternatively, if the "competitor's job" assumption is correct, then of course they want to keep the actual actors out of the investigation and away from media.

 

I have a multiboot system. One of the installed OS's does not use the NVMe SSD installed on the motherboard at all.
At the time of taking the screenshot, all the SSD partitions are unmounted, so apart from detection, the SSD is mostly unused.

  • I would like the temps to drop down to SYSTIN (≈35°C) levels.
  • I know, it's right next to my GPU, but I am not doing anything GPU intensive, the GPU temps are ~37°C ^[apart from GPU memory, which is 48°C due to the awful AMD 7th gen Zero RPM, which has no workarounds on Linux]

For the unmounted and unused HDDs, I just use hdparm -Y, but there seems to be nothing in terms of that for the SSD. And even though I appreciate the additional heat in winters, this is going to be too expensive for me. I'd rather burn some cheap Nichrome than my data storage device.

I checked out a Debian forum thread and from that, I checked the following:

❯ sudo nvme get-feature /dev/nvme0 -f 2 -H
get-feature:0x02 (Power Management), Current value:0x00000004
        Workload Hint (WH): 0 - No Workload
        Power State   (PS): 4

Showing it is already in the lowest power state.

I have no active cooling setup for the SSD from my side. This becomes relevant soon.

  • Checking the SSD temps (using the same widget as in the image), the temperature on Sensor 2 starts out at ~40°C (after a normal reboot) and slowly increases to >50°C as shown at the start of the graph. Power State (PS) is still 4.

  • Running KDE partitionmanager, which probably does some reading to check the partition information, at 50°C stage, causes a temperature drop, as shown in the image.

  • Running KDE partitionmanager right after reboot, when the temperature is increasing very sloowly, seems to do nothing significant.


  • Turns out that after a few minutes of System Standby, the SSD doesn't return to PS: 4, so I have the culprit.
  • Running partitionmanager after that causes it to go back to PS: 4

So we have a solution! All I need to do is run partitionmanager on wake. nlol jk


Motherboard: MSI MAG X570S TORPEDO MAX (MS-7D54)
SSD: Samsung 980 512GB (correct firmware, bought long before the fakes started coming out)

 

Until he actually had to use it.

Took 2 hours of reading through examples just to deploy the site.
Turns out, it is hard to do even just the bash stuff when you can't see the container.

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