Skip Navigation
samick1 samick1 @sh.itjust.works
Posts 1
Comments 26
What is your favorite video game from the 90s?
  • Total Annihilation... couldn't get enough of it. Even playing strategy games today I desperately miss the elaborate control and mechanics of TA.

  • Uhhhh, What the fuck is happening at /mildlyinteresting???
  • It's restricted right now. Most recent post is 10 days ago.

  • *Permanently Deleted*
  • When workers strike, are the temps better?

    They can do this. It won't go well.

  • How the beehaw defederation affects us
  • The beehaw admin said, to grossly paraphrase, they don't have enough admins to deal with the extra activity and they're "mildly annoyed" that sh.itjust.works and lemmy.world have "open registration" policies as they feel it invites trolls and the like.

    đŸ€·

    Edit: full post if you want to read it. I left out some stuff about ethos and spirit and stuff.

  • *Permanently Deleted*
  • Huffman said 97% of Reddit users do not use any third-party apps to browse the site.

    ...

    Huffman acknowledged that if those users instead browsed with Reddit's own app, it would shore up the company's bottom line.

    Hmm.

  • Why aren't there more admin level graphical tools available for Linux? Or if there are, what are they?
  • I think my best advice would be to make a philosophy out of it. Learn how to solve every problem you come across with the CLI. Only use Google or ChatGPT when you hit a wall, and utilize the man pages to understand why the answer works.

    Make a habit of automating common tasks using shell scripts. Over time you'll accumulate a library of cookbook code for doing common things that you can always refer to. Write comments in them to save time when you come back and refer to them. It also saves time to automate common things.

    Long ago I followed the Linux From Scratch guide and it was very enlightening. It walks you through installing a working Linux system from scratch, starting from within another installation. So you could e.g. install Debian to a VM, add a second virtual hard disk, and follow the guide to iteratively install each bit of the system on the second hard disk until you can boot it and use it. This is an intense (or at least time-consuming) process but it's worth it.

    Although it's terribly outdated now, I got a lot out of the book The Unix Programming Environment. It lays out the history of the system really well. In general, anything written by either of those two authors (Kernighan in particular) is just gold, they're both excellent teachers. It helped me intuitively understand concepts like pipes, "everything is a file", shell programming, awk, etc.

  • Why aren't there more admin level graphical tools available for Linux? Or if there are, what are they?
  • I've been using Linux since ~1996; I used to wonder about this a lot.

    The tl;dr answer is, it's too much effort only to solve the problem of making life easier for new users, and it can be a disservice to users in the long run.

    As others have pointed out, there are limited GUI tools for common administration roles.

    Power users are much, much faster at doing things via CLI. Most administrative tasks involve text file management and the UNIX userland is exceptional at processing text files.

    A graphical tool would have to deal with evolving system software and APIs, meaning the GUI tool would be on constant outpatient care; this is counter to the UNIX philosophy which is to make software simple and well-defined such that it can be considered "done" and remain versatile and flexible enough to live for decades virtually unchanged.

    It wouldn't be that much easier for things like network rules unless a truly incredible UI was designed, and that would be a risk since the way that's implemented at the system level is subject to change at any point. It's hard enough keeping CLI userland tools in sync with the kernel as it is.

    It would need to be adaptable to the ways different distributions do things. Administration on CentOS is not always the same as it is on Debian.

    And ultimately, the longer a user spends depending on GUI tools, the longer it will take them to learn and become proficient with the CLI, which will always be a far more useful skill to have. You'll never learn the innards of containers or VPS' if you only know how to do things from the GUI.

  • One thing I'm concerned about Reddit's downfall
  • Digg didn’t survive though. Right now it looks like a corporate blog with a barely visible comment section.

    That's what I was getting at.

    I agree that reddit won't run out of users. I think the big question is whether they can figure out how to turn a profit.

  • [resolved] `404: couldnt_find_community`
  • Got it. This is helpful, thank you!

  • Instant Pot's Parent Company Files for Bankruptcy
  • undefined> it always pops up if you want to quote a selection. see?

    Ah okay. I'm in the habit of copy-pasting after the > manually so I hadn't noticed that.

  • Decoding C Compilation Process: From Source Code to Binary
  • It's Beej! Long (!) time student of your guides, hope to see more of you here.

  • YouTube tests blocking videos unless you disable ad blockers
  • We'll make some plugin that downloads the ad and tells Google it was "totally watched and stuff".

  • Instant Pot's Parent Company Files for Bankruptcy
  • đŸ€Ł I didn't think you were trying to tell me something, I figured the Lemmy code goofed somewhere.

  • Instant Pot's Parent Company Files for Bankruptcy
  • I'm undefined? 😟

    Otherwise known as managing success. Once you have a successful cash flow you need to diversify it and build your business to have multiple cash flows.

    Semantics I guess. Di-worse-ification isn't always the answer. They had a large product lineup, which was probably more expensive for them than it needed to be. They went under because they failed to fortify their balance sheet... rates went up and their debt crushed them.

    Capitalism works fine just turning a profit while plenty of companies die chasing growth. It's just part of it.

  • Elon Musk Says Twitter Is Going To Get Rid Of The Block Feature, Enabling Greater Harassment
  • Twitter isn't like reddit in that hashtags don't have moderators. They outsourced moderating to the users, and now Musk has decided to remove it entirely.

    I don't get it.

  • One thing I'm concerned about Reddit's downfall
  • I wouldn't be so sure. I believe great managers could take it over and rescue it today, but they don't have great managers, the place is run by idiots. It might survive in the manner Digg survived.

    They just made it a lot harder to moderate by sparking an angry powder keg like they did, let alone killing all the mod tooling. That was better than what they've managed to produce in almost 20 years. They've also lost many of the moderators who weren't doing it for the money (at least not reddit's money). They can always hire new moderators, but that's yet another expense on the earnings statement.

    If they can get all the spam and hate posts under control it's going to be a repost farm and OP will not surely deliver anymore.

    From where I'm standing it appears they've been given an ultimatum by VC investors who are hellbent on selling whether they lose their asses at the bottom or not.

  • Instant Pot's Parent Company Files for Bankruptcy
  • It's not how they managed success, it's that they ran out of it. Making a successful niche kitchen appliance is not a business, it's one of many things that a successful niche kitchen appliance business does.

    Successful businesses also allocate capital optimally, build formidable brand and product moats, hire amazing managers and build fortified balance sheets. They forgot to do all that stuff. (See also: reddit)

  • Google challenges OpenAI's calls for government A.I. czar
  • Several companies have called for this, and they all have an ulterior agenda. OpenAI just wants street cred and to have their competitors regulated. The rest simply don't have a product and want everyone to slow down while they catch up.

    Regardless, they all know on some level the government can't stop AI just like they can't stop piracy or cryptocurrency.

  • Here it comes - Reddit admins taking over subs
  • A dozen or two of the largest subs would be plenty.

    Those subs required a huge effort to moderate before, but it's going to be 10x worse now that every submission is going to be AI generated pictures of spez doing things to goats or something.

  • Reddit CEO tells employees that subreddit blackout “will pass”
  • Same. Angry VC money is a demon that's not worth exercising.

  • Lemmy Support @lemmy.ml samick1 @sh.itjust.works

    404: couldnt_find_community

    I noticed that some communities on lemmy.ml are unable to be seen on other instances. For instance, federating the lemmy community works fine:

    https://sh.itjust.works/c/[email protected]

    But federating the kubuntu community returns 404: couldnt_find_community:

    https://sh.itjust.works/c/[email protected]

    I'm certain that second one should work... I've found perhaps two dozen other communities that have the same problem. Meanwhile, dozens of others work fine.

    ---

    Edit: @[email protected] suggested I try searching for the community first. I had actually tried this but it didn't work, which is why I started trying the deep link approach above; that worked for some communities.

    Turns out the deep link by itself will not discover new communities, only searching for them will, and the search can take a long time and will show "No results" for a little while.

    So if you're experiencing this, search instead for [email protected] from the remote instance, then the deep link will start working.

    3