I haven’t either. Maybe it’s because I don’t use any social media but Lemmy
I haven’t either. Maybe it’s because I don’t use any social media but Lemmy
Same for the mouse. My ratio is ridiculous as I just leave everything seeding. I also use a VPN that allows port forwarding even though its not a big deal in my country I still do it anyway.
Thanks for the post, super appreciate the posting of other communties. I think this is a great way to grow Lemmy and create discoverability for niche communities, I’ll keep that in mind myself on future opportunities.
Exactly the same here too. As a teenager we also all pitched in on a CD burner when they first came out and kept it at the BBS’s owners place, I just remember a single CD took forever back then when it was 1x and 2x recording speed. That allowed us to share a ton more without everyone having to get together on the LAN.
Thats really interesting. I wonder how much the culture and expectations of norms in corporations makes a difference with this.
Have you worked in several all female crews as well? Its hard to judge when you don’t have a baseline to consider.
This is spot on from my experience as well, you can even see this dynamic play out within individual departments in the same company.
I hear you on the cold part. So many tripped breakers from space heaters… and that one time, a very angry UPS that got plugged into.
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If he recognized his typo with the space after the D:\ in his restore command he could have been saved at the bargaining stage. I am so glad I don’t work with this stuff anymore.
Same thing here, but I bought it when winter was coming. I’m nomadic during the warm season so the true test for me will be when that happens.
Same for me. Only thing that made it permenantly stick.
The attack vectors I’m thinking of just come from the inherent complexity and centralization. I’m just considering the amount of damage that can be done with a compromised DA account for example vs a non directory environment.
It’s complicated. Done right it can be more secure, not done right it’s less secure.
I also only get brought in for problems for the last however many years, so I’m probaby a bit biased at this point haha.
I have had to tell companies they are going to have to rebuild thier AD from scratch because they didn’t know what thier DSRM password was (usually after a ransomware attack). These are the sort of hassles I think about vs non AD.
You could look at freeIPA or something similar to stay on Linux.
I’m an AD specialist, starting when it came out with server 2000, and can tell you it’s a waste of time for a home network unless you are doing this just because you want to learn it.
It will definitly not make your life any easier, and will increase attack vectors, especially if you don’t know how to secure and protect it.
First family computer I used was a TI99 4/a, this was around 1983 or so, with tape deck. Used to type in programs from magazines. I grew up using BBSs, Lan parties, freenet, and shared university accounts when the internet still wasn’t publically accessible.
My first computer that was my own I remember well because it was unique, a dual Pentium pro which was the first i686 and that processor line went on to power ASCI red to become the first supercomputer to reach a teraflop. Dual CPUs in consumer hardware was very unique for the time, it was more classed a workstation then a computer.
Don’t count out the power supply, it can cause that issue as well.
And also not updating them when things change. The recovery process for a database changes considerably once it’s involved in replication, which one client found out the hard way.
Dead Kennedy’s
I owned this tape 😁