• 3 Posts
  • 487 Comments
Joined 4 months ago
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Cake day: June 9th, 2024

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  • “Debian is too far behind! Packages are too old!”

    The best rule of thumb I’ve ever heard regarding Debian Stable is that if the kernel in stable’s default repo fully supports ALL your hardware, and the software in stable’s default repos fully support your workflows, it’s fine.

    If those are NOT true, then you probably don’t want to use Stable, because you’ll either end up fighting it via manually compiled and installed software, or you’ll venture into so many 3rd party repos for updated packages that updating it later becomes problematic and prone to making the whole system catch fire and burn down.


  • You know, the older I get the more I respect the people who come out and say ‘I’m not going to learn that, and I don’t want to.’

    It’s a LOT better than dealing with someone who half-asses and kinda wishy-washes around and says they’ll maybe do something but then doesn’t and well, wasn’t ever going to.

    If you’re not interested and won’t, say so up front so you don’t waste your or my time trying to get you to do something.


  • Have some stuff on a VPS, some stuff hosted as static pages at Cloudflare, some stuff hosted at home too.

    Depends on if 100% uptime is required, if they’re just serving static content, or if they’re in some way related to another service I’m running (I have a couple of BBSes, and the web pages that host the clients and VMs that host the clients run locally).

    Though, at this point, anything I’m NOT hosting at home is kinda a “legacy” deployment, and probably will be brought in-house at some point in the future or converted to static-only and put on Cloudflare if there’s some reason I can’t/don’t want to host it at home.






  • You have your coworkers on an unmanaged machine with a foreign OS on the guest WiFi with custom networking.

    Which, at any of my last few corporate jobs, would be grounds for termination, if not immediately throwing you out of the building and telling you if you come back we’re calling the cops.

    You really don’t bypass controls in a corporate environment like this if you like working there.

    (And yes, not EVERY job will react that way, but any that’s got any compliance requirements absolutely will.)








  • I’ve been pushing Squarespace for most people who come to me asking about setting up a small store or just simple business website.

    Yeah, it’s closed source and blah blah blah, but the end of the day, it’s not about my opinions on software, it’s about the most cost-effective, simple, usable option for the client who is asking me for my expertise, which is almost always not something they’re going to have to keep paying me to maintain.

    Like if you really really want Wordpress, I’ll get you set up, and then quote you a couple thousand a year for maintenance.

    Unshockprisingly, very few people think that’s the right choice once they see what the keep-it-from-being-exploited cost is.

    (And for anyone who thinks that’s an unreasonable amount, okay cool. But maintaining a staging environment and testing updates and then pushing everything into production assuming there’s no regressions you have to address takes a lot of time.)


  • I’m somewhat surprised that there aren’t a lot of good alternatives but uh, yeah, there doesn’t seem to be.

    I would have expected there to be at least one or two good TTS engines but I guess that assumption is quite wrong.

    As to your other post, it’s less that I care in any specific sense that Microsoft knows what I’m reading and more of a (admittedly irrational) dislike of providing anything that an ad company could maybe later use to sell me shit.