Salta al contenuto principale



in reply to crankyrebel

As someone with a career in manufacturing who lived in the rust belt most of my life: I knew I was fucked financially each time Trump won, even without the needing to move to avoid hostile laws. What American manufacturing needs is affordable housing, reasonable trade, subsidies to start, and to accept that thr future of american manufacturing is high tech manufacturing that relies on our high numbers of engineers and our skilled tradespeople. Well paid, unskilled manufacturing jobs aren't coming back, but sensible forward thinking policies can ensure we have plenty of jobs designing, building, operating, and maintaining advanced and modern manufacturing systems.

Also the fact that our currency is highly valued isnt the best strategy for manufacturing, but it's an excellent strategy for other industries like finance and provides us a powerful ability to purchase foreign goods.

in reply to captainlezbian

To shift to manufacturing america needs to move to machine manufacturing and not just goods manufacturing since they are already being done very well in china, american labour cannot compete with china for cheap items the Chinese are just too good. But when it comes to advanced stuff like cars, solar panels, machineries etc that's where USA needs to work on.


Podolyaka: Trump struck the stock exchanges with nuclear submarines — and nothing more




Turkey has launched the supply of Azerbaijani gas to Syria, – TRT Haber


in reply to jackeroni

not often talked about is the illegal Turkish occupation and effective annexation of Northern Syria.. This is basically Turkey and other comprador states seizing the $$$ opportunity in the midst of sanctions against Russia and Iran from the West while also muzzling Syria and putting it on an economic leash, so to speak.

more details on this in particular that I found insightful: turkey.news-pravda.com/en/worl…

what's funny/sad is that Syria's effectively a comprador state, the West finally got what they wanted and despite this, sanctions haven't vanished. So they rely on scraps like these.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


After Ukraine, is this country the West’s next project?





two PMOS installs with LUKS


So I'm trying to setup peppermint os , I have two disks and I want them both to have full disk encryption. After a couple of reinstalls using different approaches, searches and llm questions , still can't get it to work.

First boot gets to encryption of SDA (I believe) , then to grub menu and I'm able to load the first one.
Managed to get new entries but then I get: server error you need to load the kernel first.

I believe both installs are fine and that it is a LUKS thing. UEFI, disabled secure boot.

Sda1 EFI
Sda2 root

Sdb1 EFI
Sdb2 root

Maybe EFI should only be on one of them?

in reply to hankthetankie [none/use name]

Have you tried asking on the Peppermint forums? People there might be more familiar with the specifics of the distro.





in reply to crankyrebel

Better to get upset about a stupid ballroom than any other, more damning issue in the current news cycle that the current administration might prefer you forgot about...
in reply to crankyrebel

So, I've been going through making profiles for everybody, starting with Jeffrey Epstein, and generating a new, connected note when I see new information (Obsidian). I'm running with the hypothesis and framework that "The Establishment" is a real criminal enterprise. What I've found seems to be five branches, ranging from finance to intelligence, all interconnected. Two prevalent philosophies beyond greed and power: Christen Zionism and Transhumanism. Basically, it is a big coherent effort by lots of individuals and agencies with like goals. Trump, I call the disruptor. Basically, Trump seems to be so full of himself that he thinks he can take on the system AND be a dictator, from what I've gathered (189 profiles, including individuals, agencies, events, timeline, doctrines)
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


Police in German state to use controversial software by Palantir | dpa international


cross-posted from: lemmy.zip/post/45358033

Police in the south-western German state of Baden-Württemberg are to be allowed to use the analysis software from US firm Palantir, which is controversial among data protection advocates

The software was specifically developed for security agencies and is used by intelligence services, the military and police.

Palantir was founded in 2003 in the United States, notably by tech billionaire Peter Thiel. He is known for his libertarian and conservative positions, his closeness to US President Donald Trump and his criticism of liberal democracies.


in reply to schizoidman

I guess they’d argue that none of those pesky little data protection laws apply to competent authorities like the police and they’re probably justifying it with the criminal prosecution clause.

Great.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to 0xtero

Exactly. Only small businesses and individuals have to honour the GDPR, not them.
in reply to schizoidman

Germany has been one of the biggest supporters of the genocide, they’re cracking down on minor dissent, they’re targeting minorities (including anti-Zionist Jews specifically). The Nazis are controlling Germany again.
in reply to surph_ninja

Sadly they always have been. USSR shouldn't have stopped at Berlin.
in reply to surph_ninja

I'll just throw in the mandatory 'always on the wrong side of history' cliché.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to surph_ninja

Is it because they’re ashamed of their past they now fully encourage Israel?
in reply to july

No. It’s that the Nazis never really left power. They simply ruled under US supervision. And the Nazis always cooperated with the Zionist project.



I stand with Israel


Whether or not an ethnostate is good depends on the ethnicity of the people of the ethnostate.

(/s, it is POV of a racist)

in reply to YappyMonotheist

The American civil war was about states rights (states right to white supremacy)

Our new government['s]...foundations are laid, its cornerstone rests upon the great truth, that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery—subordination to the superior race—is his natural and normal condition. This, our new government, is the first, in the history of the world, based upon this great physical, philosophical, and moral truth.
in reply to skaarl

Even dumb and murderous racists have gone downhill in the US, lol. These ones at least seem literate!
in reply to skaarl

States rights people hate it when pointing out slavery was enshrined in the state constitutions as a requirement for being part of the confederacy.

Or when showing the south was pushing the north to ignore their states rights by forcing them to only follow southern slavery laws

in reply to skaarl

this is rather dumb considering Israel is more ethnically diverse than any of it's neighbors

73.2% (about 7,208,000 people) are Jews, including about 503,000 living outside the self-defined borders of the State of Israel in the West Bank
21.1% (around 2,080,000 people) are Israeli citizens classified as Arab, some identifying as Palestinian, and including Druze, Circassians, all other Muslims, Christian Arabs, Armenians (which Israel considers "Arab")
[2] An additional 5.7% (roughly 554,000 people) are classified as "others". This diverse group comprises those with Jewish ancestry but not recognized as Jewish by religious law, non-Jewish family members of Jewish immigrants, Christians other than Arabs and Armenians, and residents without a distinct ethnic or religious categorization.[2][1]


en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demogr…

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to peregrin5

In a 2012 ruling by the Supreme Court on the issue, some of the judges on the panel discussed demography, and were inclined to accept that demography is a legitimate consideration in devising family reunification policies that violate the right to family life.

Those in favor of the law say the law not only limits the possibility of the entrance of terrorists into Israel, but, as Ze'ev Boim asserts, allows Israel "to maintain the state's democratic nature, but also its Jewish nature" (i. e., its Jewish demographic majority).

in reply to peregrin5

more ethnically diverse
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to peregrin5

Israel sterilized Ethiopian Jews without their consent stfu cracker.
in reply to peregrin5

The whites need the others to do all the hard work. Can't have a fascist settler colonial project without exploiting the natives. The ones that haven't been murdered in the genocide yet, of course.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to woodenghost [comrade/them]

They need comprador tokens for PR brownie points to convince the libs of the diversity lie too
in reply to peregrin5

Ethnically diverse? Motherfucker, they're all kinds of WHITE EUROPEANS. It occupies Palestine with that in mind, using religion to hide behind it and justify it.

The other 30 percent were either kidnapped children from various operations (with the help of the West) that grew up to be dogs of the Euroanglo-zionazis and become Zionazis themselves or straight up opportunist compradors from all around the world. Oh and to top it off, they sterilize them no matter how much they try to be a good dog, because they're not white enough.

That's not diversity, that's a settler-colonial ethnostate playing population control, trying to get just enough brown to justify their occupation to the public, but not too much to maintain Pan-Europa whiteness.

in reply to peregrin5

And everybody has the same rights there? Or are some higher than others???
in reply to peregrin5

considering Israel is more ethnically diverse


Apartheid South Africa was ethnically diverse...... Still an ethno-state.

Ethno-states aren't defined as lacking diversity, they are defined by an ethnic creating and maintaining a dominant hierarchy of that diversity.

in reply to TranscendentalEmpire

not disagreeing but want to point out by that definition America is an ethnostate. Which again I'm not disagreeing with.
in reply to peregrin5

For the vast majority of its history absolutely. It wasn't until the civil rights movement where that was even somewhat debatable.
in reply to peregrin5

I don't know why you're getting down voted. It's just a historical fact.
in reply to Saymaz

It's because he's attempting to utilize the fact that America was and potentially still is an ethno-state to lessen the culpability of the Israeli ethno-state.

While modern America uses systemic racism to establish an ethnic hierarchy, unlike Israel it doesn't expressly by law prohibit the movement or upward mobility of different ethnicities. Even if it did, that fact would not lessen the culpability of another state doing the same.

Context and nuance is important.

in reply to TranscendentalEmpire

I thought they were just agreeing on the fact that the USA is also an ethno-state that was founded on genocide.
in reply to Saymaz

They were, but when evaluated against their original claim its pretty apparent they were doing it to establish a whataboutism.
in reply to peregrin5

by that definition America is an ethnostate.


🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔

in reply to ShinkanTrain

what do you think white Republicans and project 2025 are doing hunty?
in reply to peregrin5

as well as most of the democrats and their refusal to enact the equal rights amendment.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to peregrin5

it started inthe 70's and passed all the ratification hurdles in 2020; that's how long people have been trying to push for it and proves how little things change within the american system.

in typical democrat fashion, biden made much ado about ratifying it, but without supporting it against the technical hangups so that it would die on its own and doing so paved the way for project 2025.

in reply to eldavi

i doubt it would have made it past the republican owned Congress that Biden experienced during his tenure. has very little to do with lack of Democrat support. this just smells like anti-Democrat whataboutism to me.
in reply to peregrin5

democrats had majority control of the house, senate and presidency in 2020; there was nothing stopping them from pushing this through.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to eldavi

looking at the history it looks like in 2020 democrats were trying to push this through but via a state ratification process. keep in mind dems only had congress for two years and there were other things they were trying to get done such as ACA. reading through the history though it seems everytime it is put forward or progress is made toward it, it is being pushed forward by democrats. what are you bitching about now? that biden didnt dictator it in like Trump does? why do types like you only ever bitch about dems and not repubs? how much is putin paying you? or is he just holding your family in front of a window?
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to peregrin5

the democrats kept control of the house for the entirety of biden's tenure as president while they had control of the senate for half of it and the aca fell apart anyways despite the democrats having a majority .... again.

no one expects the republicans to follow through on welfare programs, so it's silly to hold them to account on it on something like the equal rights amendment; the democrats do claim to care and that's why we expect progress from them.

in reply to eldavi

it's silly to expect basic humanity from Republicans so you bitch about democrats having basic humanity but not doing enough (in your opinion). lol ok then.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to peregrin5

why would anyone complain about something they're not expecting?
in reply to eldavi

maybe your expectations for Republicans are too low

i almost forgot why i had instance blocked .ml on my lemm.ee account and neglected to do so on my piefed account. my bad. i keep getting reminded what a waste of time it is to talk to tankie chuds.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)

in reply to zero

Good job Mr president. Now you've helped Russia with a few things.

  1. If they know where the sub's are, they now know if you lie or tell the truth about the sub's.
  2. If they didn't know where the sub's are, they now know where they probably weren't, and where they may be going
  3. In either case, they know you've fucked with their patrol routes, which may give them yet another advantage with finding them; or seeing how you influence their routes



How can ufw do me like that?


EDIT: Thanks for the help guys!

Something strange happened just now, im trying to figure out how exactly did it happen. On my server I was suddely able to bypass my VPN! I looked around what did happened and found that my VPN service had sent me an email that my subscription expired. What is strange is that I have ufw rules like

To                         Action      From

[VPN server]               ALLOW OUT   Anywhere                  
Anywhere                   ALLOW OUT   Anywhere on tun0

So it should be not allowed to access the internet outside of tun0. Why exactly did it happen? Does the VPN service change iptables or something? Any ideas? I was able to ping, wget, even surf on w3m. The thing is that when I rebooted the server, nothing could connect outside the tunnel, as it should be. Here is the whole ufw table.
Status: active
Logging: on (low)
Default: deny (incoming), deny (outgoing), disabled (routed)
New profiles: skip

To                         Action      From
--                         ------      ----
22/tcp                     ALLOW IN    192.168.1.0/24            
53                         ALLOW IN    192.168.1.0/24            
80                         ALLOW IN    192.168.1.0/24            
9091                       ALLOW IN    192.168.1.0/24              # Transmission
2049                       ALLOW IN    192.168.1.0/24              # nfs

[VPN server]               ALLOW OUT   Anywhere                  
Anywhere                   ALLOW OUT   Anywhere on tun0          
192.168.2.77 22            ALLOW OUT   Anywhere                  
2049                       ALLOW OUT   Anywhere                   # nfs

So how in the world did my VPN company do something to bypass my ufw??? Or was it something else completely?

TIA

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to blobjim [he/him]

curl ifconfig.me shows my ip address and I have full rawdog access to the internet lol


Lemmy Development Update July 2025


Work on the backend changes for 1.0 is mostly finished now. What's missing is optimizing the migrations as they currently take about 9 hours for lemmy.ml. Now we are starting to work on updating lemmy-ui for the API changes and new features.

In the last days we did a big cleanup of the lemmy-ui issue tracker, closing 450 mostly outdated issues. Many of these were over a year old describing problems that have long been fixed. From 570 issues only 120 remain. Most of these are very minor, changing a single UI element here or there. It should be possible to implement 90% of them within a month or two.

Here are some of the major changes made over the past month:

  • Add ability to block all users of an instance (#5784)
  • Notifications rewrite, users can be notified about new posts or comments (#5604)
  • Post tags (#5869)
  • Site and user setting for items per page (#5887)
  • Don't show edit mark if comment was edited in less than 5 minutes (#3197)
  • Speedup of 1.0 migrations (#5873)

::: spoiler Full list of changes by user

jfaustino



SleeplessOne1917



dessalines



dullbananas



Nutomic


:::

Or see the full list of changes at the links below:


An open source project the size of Lemmy needs constant work to manage the project, implement new features and fix bugs. Dessalines and Nutomic work full-time on these tasks and more. As there is no advertising or tracking, all of our work is funded through donations. Even so there is barely enough time in the day, and no time for a second job. The only available option are user donations. To keep it viable donations need to reach a minimum of 5000€ per month, resulting in a modest salary of 2500€ per developer. If that goal is reached we can stop worrying about money, and fully focus on improving the software for the benefit of all users and instances. We especially rely on recurring donations to secure the long-term development and make Lemmy the best it can be.

Donate

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to Dessalines

Don’t show edit mark if comment was edited in less than 5 minutes


I think 5 minutes is too much. Why not 2 minutes or 5 minutes only if the comment does not have votes and replies?

in reply to Dessalines

Thanks for the hard work!!!

I'm curious how the new tag system will work. Could you post when it could be tested in any of the test instances?

Btw, I use a bot to post twice daily in !workingclasscalendar@lemmy.world and I've been (ab)using the search system to tag with nice results:

Edited: ooops removed backslashes

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


DIY cyborg (Nerdforge)


cross-posted from: lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/50536830

DIY cyborg rule (Nerdforge)

Pro doesn't like this.


in reply to Arthur Besse

Using LLMs does not obviate the need for the human user to understand what the code is doing. I've also found that, as with any tool, it takes time to actually learn to use LLMs effectively.

In particular, I find it's really important to understand the problem being solved, and then come up with the solution yourself. One approach I’ve found to be effective is to stub out the functions myself, and have the agent fill in the blanks for me. This helps focus the LLM and prevent it from going off into the weeds.

Another trick I find handy is to ask the agent to first write a plan for the solution. Then I can review the plan and tell the agent to adjust it as needed before implementing. Agents are also pretty good at writing tests, and tests are much easier to evaluate for correctness because good tests are just independent functions that do one thing and don’t have a deep call stack. My current approach is to get the LLM to write the plan, add tests, and then focus on making sure I understand the tests and that they pass. At that point I have a fairly high degree of confidence that the code is indeed doing what’s needed. The tests act as a contract for the agent to fill and as a specification for the defined functionality.

I suspect that programming languages might start shifting in the direction of contracts in general. I can see stuff like this becoming the norm, where you specify the signature for the function, and you could also specify parameters like computational complexity and memory usage. The agent could then try to figure out how to fill the contract you’ve defined. It would be akin to genetic algorithm approach where the agent could converge on a solution over time. If that’s the direction things will be moving in, then current skills could be akin to being able to write assembly by hand. Useful in some niche situations, but not necessary vast majority of the time.

Finally, it’s very helpful to structure things using small components components that can be tested independently and composed together to build bigger things. As long as the component functions in the intended way, I don’t necessarily care about the quality of the code internally. I can treat them as black boxes as long as they’re doing what’s expected at the surface level. This is already the approach we take with libraries as we don’t audit every line of code in a library we include in a project. We just look at its surface level API provided.

Incidentally, I’m noticing that functional style seems to work really well here. Having an assembly line of pure functions naturally breaks up a problem into small building blocks that you can reason about in isolation. It’s kind of like putting Lego blocks together. The advantage over stuff like microservies here is that you don’t have to deal with the complexity of orchestration and communication between the services.



Palestinian child dies of Israeli-imposed starvation


A 17-year-old Palestinian child has died of malnutrition, Wafa news agency is reporting, citing medical sources at Al-Shifa medical complex in Gaza City.

This follows the deaths of three Palestinians, including two children, from Israeli-imposed starvation on Friday.

Khater's death brings the toll of Palestinians who have died from Israeli-imposed starvation to 163, including 92 children.


in reply to BoredGamer

It's "food stamps" or "SNAP" (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program).
in reply to BoredGamer

OK this is creepy. My son JUST watched this episode 10 min again. Either a coincidence or my grapheneOS pixel and Lemmy are spying on me.


Palestinian child dies of Israeli-imposed starvation


A 17-year-old Palestinian child has died of malnutrition, Wafa news agency is reporting, citing medical sources at Al-Shifa medical complex in Gaza City.

Atef Abu Khater was hospitalised in intensive care earlier this week- his father reportedly said he was no longer responding to treatment.

This follows the deaths of three Palestinians, including two children, from Israeli-imposed starvation on Friday.

Khater's death brings the toll of Palestinians who have died from Israeli-imposed starvation to 163, including 92 children.



What do you self host, how, and why?


How in terms of "how did you do it" i.e. a guide a wiki etc. How to you maintain it? How do you provide security and how do you maintain it? Do you host on bare metal at home? Do you use a cloud service? If the former, how do you connect to it when you aren't at home?

I realize that's a lot to ask, but I have some down time and want to hear everyone's full viewpoints

in reply to wuphysics87

I started running my own NextCloud instance on a VPS years ago and it's been really nice. I use it for my calendar, contacts, file storage/sync, and music streaming. It replaced pretty much everything I used google services for.


‘Immense’ pro-Palestine march to cross Sydney Harbour Bridge as police prepare for five-hour shutdown


cross-posted from: aussie.zone/post/23257570

Pro-Palestine protesters will be legally protected while marching across the Sydney Harbour Bridge on Sunday after a New South Wales supreme court decision.

The bridge is expected to be closed for about five hours, from 11.30am, and additional police are being mobilised to observe a march that could include up to 50,000 people.

In her judgment, Justice Belinda Rigg said “the march at this location is motivated by the belief that the horror and urgency of the situation in Gaza demands an urgent and extraordinary response from the people of the world”.

“The evidence indicates there is significant support for the march.”

50,000 seems a bit on the small side for a Sydney Harbour Bridge march. Hopefully there will be many many more than that.



‘Immense’ pro-Palestine march to cross Sydney Harbour Bridge as police prepare for five-hour shutdown


cross-posted from: aussie.zone/post/23257570

Pro-Palestine protesters will be legally protected while marching across the Sydney Harbour Bridge on Sunday after a New South Wales supreme court decision.

The bridge is expected to be closed for about five hours, from 11.30am, and additional police are being mobilised to observe a march that could include up to 50,000 people.

In her judgment, Justice Belinda Rigg said “the march at this location is motivated by the belief that the horror and urgency of the situation in Gaza demands an urgent and extraordinary response from the people of the world”.

“The evidence indicates there is significant support for the march.”

50,000 seems a bit on the small side for a Sydney Harbour Bridge march. Hopefully there will be many many more than that.


in reply to hankthetankie [none/use name]

Unsustainable if the app needs to be updated and not guaranteed to work, but I have ripped out the network and other unnecessary permissions of APKs before using APK Editor Studio.
in reply to monovergent 🛠️

BTW you don't neee an external app to remove network permission on GrapheneOS
in reply to hankthetankie [none/use name]

People have mentioned NextDNS (just a DNS setting) and TrackerControl (connects as a VPN on android/grapheneos)

I can mention also DNSNet (which actually also uses a VPN) and PCAPdroid

There are other options, with more features. Lists exist online



Hamas Wants Gaza to Starve [Please first read, then comment]


By Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib

E: Please read the article before commenting.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to jordanlund

The article says that Hamas wants Israel to starve Gazans, it doesn't say that Israel doesn't starve Gazans.

It literally says Israel uses hunger as weapon (against Hamas and against –or at least not caring about– civilians): "Hamas has benefited from Israel’s decision to use food as a lever against the terror group, because the catastrophic conditions for civilians have generated an international outcry, which is worsening Israel’s global standing and forcing it to reverse course."

E: You partly approve the article yourself and I'm aware of the fact it's Israel committing the genocide.

Not I nor the article have said that Israel isn't committing genocide. The only thing said is that Hamas profits by it and that Gazans are furious about looters and the Hamas. I don't understand why so many people downvote this, claim I would be paid, claim I would deny the genocide or write 6 comments where 1 would be enough, if not you want to deny Hamas is a terrorist organization which only cares about its own survival.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to Petersson

So why did Hamas agree to a ceasefire in March which Israel broke?

Why is Hamas bending over to accept ceasefire conditions? You are spreading Zionist blood libel and genocide propaganda.




France suspends Gaza evacuations over antisemitic posts by Palestinian student


in reply to ikt

Oh no the victims are not perfect. This means they deserve to be genocided!


How Did Hunger Get So Much Worse in Gaza?


How Did Hunger Get So Much Worse in Gaza?
nytimes.com/interactive/2025/0…
in reply to zero

Must be a bad harvest. No idea what could have caused this NYT.

in reply to mrdown

Yeah, but people are desperate and die of hunger.

Unknown parent

lemmy - Collegamento all'originale
mumblerfish
That would be an impressive addition to the standard model.


Attack Vector Controls Land In Linux 6.17 To Better Control CPU Security Mitigations


in reply to Shimitar

A lot of the security fixes since spectre have focused on exploiting speculative execution (a key CPU performance feature) to cross security boundaries. Defeating speculative execution when switching from user to kernel space (for example) adds a lot of overhead.

The new kernel add controls so that machines that don't need to worry about these exploits to disable the performance killing fixes.

in reply to wewbull

I get the concept. Title is written so badly that's really unreadable make no sense and confuses even people who know a bit on the subject.

The word "land" should be relaces, because it stck with controls and lose its meaning. Also, repeating control again adds to the mess.

in reply to Shimitar

Agreed. The headline is terrible. Headline Case Doesn't Help Either.
in reply to Karna

The Attack Vector Controls work is now in Linux 6.17 for those new tuning knobs worked on by AMD engineer David Kaplan to make it more straight-forward for Linux server administrators and power users to more easily select the CPU security mitigations relevant to their system(s) and intended workloads


Title makes more sense in context of the first couple paragraphs.



Protesters demand release of draftees in Vinnytsia, break into detention facility




multi boot - Hibernating and booting into another System or Distribution: will my filesystems be corrupted?


Short answer is: yes, as soon as more than one OS mounts a file system in read-write mode.

The kernel of a modern OS (I am generously including Windows here) caches file system data structures in memory. When you hibernate the computer, the content of that memory is written into a large file because that speeds-up a later restart.

Now, if you boot up another OS, and modify these partitions (without mounting them read-only), you alter the file systems data structures. That happens already when you view folders because this modifies access times stored in the inodes.

When you now shut down the second OS, and resume the first OS, the restarted kernel will have and use cached file system metadata which id loaded from the image into the kernel, that does not match that of the files on disk. And this causes file system corruption by definition.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to HaraldvonBlauzahn

When you say hibernate do you mean sleep, because my understanding was proper hibernate writes the image to disk of the memory, and reads that back in on next boot. PC is totally off during proper hibernate
in reply to BCsven

No, I mean hibernate, with the PC turned off. In sleep state, you return to the running kernel/OS, so no possibility to boot into another distro, therefore no risk of filesystem damage.

The crucial thing is that file systems need to be unmounted before they can be accessed by another distribution or OS.

see

askubuntu.com/questions/55527/…

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


How often do I have to buy a new pixel if I fully degoogle with GrapheneOS? A support question


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/34045100

still deciding to fully degoogle with GOS or muddling through with what I have (proprietary, data grabbing and bloated).

To understand the question, compare with my main hardware with debian on it: a regular notebook I bought in 2016 and I've used heavily for all kinds of stuff: working, writing papers, downloading and playing media including AV1, editing audio, torrenting...

One of the best investments I ever made, considering what I paid and how prices nowadays are. Debian offers regular upgrades and I don't have to check if my hardware is going to support the software on a level comparable with android devices (GOS only runs on pixels, other open-source, privacy focused Android operating systems have similar hardware restrictions).

I want this kind of ROI for the device I buy and the software I use, but I don't know if that's possible:

GOS drops support for older pixels but I don't know how many years any particular device is supported by GOS: 3 years? not enough. There's no way I'm buying a new pixel every 3 years. I'd even consider 6 years restrictive.



How often do I have to buy a new pixel if I fully degoogle with GrapheneOS? A support question


still deciding to fully degoogle with GOS or muddling through with what I have (proprietary, data grabbing and bloated).

To understand the question, compare with my main hardware with debian on it: a regular notebook I bought in 2016 and I've used heavily for all kinds of stuff: working, writing papers, downloading and playing media including AV1, editing audio, torrenting...

One of the best investments I ever made, considering what I paid and how prices nowadays are. Debian offers regular upgrades and I don't have to check if my hardware is going to support the software on a level comparable with android devices (GOS only runs on pixels, other open-source, privacy focused Android operating systems have similar hardware restrictions).

I want this kind of ROI for the device I buy and the software I use, but I don't know if that's possible:

GOS drops support for older pixels but I don't know how many years any particular device is supported by GOS: 3 years? not enough. There's no way I'm buying a new pixel every 3 years. I'd even consider 6 years restrictive.


in reply to merompetehla

If the applications lag to the point where you can't stand it, you're going to need a new phone anyway and for most people who use social media applications like WhatsApp etc., the performance of the phone goes outdated much sooner than the support of the OS.
in reply to merompetehla

My ne lasted a little less than 3 years. It's not the best phone if I'm honest. Battery life is horrible.


How often do I have to buy a new pixel if I fully degoogle with GrapheneOS? A support question


still deciding to fully degoogle with GOS or muddling through with what I have (proprietary, data grabbing and bloated).

To understand the question, compare with my main hardware with debian on it: a regular notebook I bought in 2016 and I've used heavily for all kinds of stuff: working, writing papers, downloading and playing media including AV1, editing audio, torrenting...

One of the best investments I ever made, considering what I paid and how prices nowadays are. Debian offers regular upgrades and I don't have to check if my hardware is going to support the software on a level comparable with android devices (GOS only runs on pixels, other open-source, privacy focused Android operating systems have similar hardware restrictions).

I want this kind of ROI for the device I buy and the software I use, but I don't know if that's possible:

GOS drops support for older pixels but I don't know how many years any particular device is supported by GOS: 3 years? not enough. There's no way I'm buying a new pixel every 3 years. I'd even consider 6 years restrictive.

in reply to merompetehla

The biggest problem will be that depending on the country you live in, you simply won't find the battery to replace it and there is simply no reliable parallel brand for the Google Pixel. iFixit sells the original battery but does not ship to any country
in reply to merompetehla

GOS is limited by upstream support. Newer devices can be up to 6 years.


Changes according to the new UK, USA, EU laws?


So, im kinda curious ~~(preocupied)~~, regarding how is the feddi-verse standing in regards to this new threath to freedoms and privacy in general. To the point in which some of us are seriously considering leaving the "clear" net altogether in favor of freenet, tor (even if already kinda compromised by the feds), etc.

So... what now?

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to SinJab0n

I always hanged around non-mainstream forms of social media. The main issue with that is that the lack of "normies" soon transforms them in bubbles where extreme or controversial ideas are normalized.
in reply to JumpyWombat

Ik, but even then is better than having' no privacy at all. I got kicked from my first university for participating in protests regarding the "grape" of a student by a faculty member, i was one of the unlucky ones selected to be "examples", hell its even a law now that all protest are illegal and reason to inmediate expulsion.

So yeah, liberty and privacy, nothing less.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)