They are my oldest and deadliest enemy. You cannot trust them.
If Hitler invaded Hell, I would give a favourable reference to the Devil.

Saturday, April 09

Life

Comparisons

So, the main downstairs area of my current house - front hall, hall to the main bedroom and the first metre of the bedroom (it sticks out the front by 2.4m or so), ensuite, laundry, kitchen, lounge / dining area, and stairs - measures 8m x 6m.  (I got one of those laser measury things.)

The living room of the new house measures 7m x 6m - and is just part of a large open-plan area that flows off via two hallways to the rest of the house.

Being able to move around, having different rooms for different things, after spending this much time in a shoebox...  It's going to take some adjusting.

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Friday, April 08

Geek

Daily News Stuff 8 April 2022

Deadly Hellscape Edition

Top Story

  • Made an offer today on house #4, the one with the built-in Pepsi fridge that's directly adjacent to a nature reserve, or as one commenter noted since this is Australia, a deadly hellscape.

    This one is "only" about twice the size of my current place, but that's what I need.  I'm kind of wedged in at the moment and don't have room to arrange things more efficiently, and with this house I can pile everything in to one half while leaving the other half free to set things up properly.

    Plus gigabit internet access, plus only two neighbouring properties instead of eight.  And up in the hills where this town is, they haven't been having F*CK ME IT'S POURING WITH RAIN AGAIN.


  • Ahem.  Anyway it will be great to get off the rental treadmill and own something, not because I mind renting so much as I mind someone else getting to set my schedule like this.


  • Update: They asked for $5k over my offer.  I said yes.

    So...  What's the next step?  Something involving money, I think.  I'm new to this game.


  • AMD's new Ryzen 7 5800X3D is the fasted CPU in the world for playing Shadow of the Tomb Raider.  (Tom's Hardware)

    16% faster than Intel's factory-overclocked Core i9-12900KS.

    Exactly why you need to see Lara Croft's boobs at 231 FPS I don't know.

Tech News



Disclaimer: Your four-colour map theorem has no power here.

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Thursday, April 07

Geek

Daily News Stuff 7 April 2022

Seventeenth Time's The Charm Edition

Top Story

  • Looking at yet another house.  About 10% more expensive than the one that got away, and a bit smaller overall, but  closer to the shops and with nicer fixtures - like a built-in wine fridge (I don't drink), a butlers pantry (I may buttle on occasion), and an ensuite bigger than my current bedroom.

    There are some brand new 4-bedroom houses that are 30% cheaper, but they're the type that are extruded by a machine and plopped down on a tiny block of land so there's a bare ribbon of grass on each side.  This one is at the end of a dead-end street adjacent a nature reserve, so while not my first choice - or my second - it has some good points.


  • If I get this place I'm going to fill the wine fridge with Pepsi just because I can.


  • Australia reinforcement data quantum priority roadmap.  (ZDNet)

    Verbing weirds language, doubly so when governments do it.

Tech News

Disclaimer: Not enough to actually buy one though.

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Wednesday, April 06

Geek

Daily News Stuff 6 April 2022

The Load Average Is Over 9000 Edition

Top Story

  • Waiting for house news. 

    Update: There's a buyer for this one as well so I've upped their offer by $25k.  I'll be cross if this one gets away because I've already set up a shopping list at Ikea.

    Update: And now I'm probably going to be cross.  The other buyers lost their house in the floods, and they've already paid the deposit, so unless they can't exchange contracts tomorrow the owners are going to take their offer.

    Also, apologies are due to unknown real-estate agent #1 who I thought was playing games.  That property - which had been on the market for quite a while - has sold.


  • Had a report that one of my (virtual) servers was port scanning someone.  I'm not sure if it was legit, and a scan of the server showed nothing untoward, but I have to take it seriously.

    First step was to block unwanted outbound traffic at the firewall.  The first thing I do with any server is to block unwanted inbound traffic, but everyone* does that these days so all the major exploits sneak unwanted data in on trusted connection. - like the huge Log4j mess a few weeks ago.

    Easy peasy because if you screw up the firewall settings on a virtual server you can get in via the virtual console.  I've done this on physical servers on the other side of the planet, with complex networking arrangements and no console, and that is nerve-wracking.

    Next step was to rebuild that server entirely since all it runs is a proxy server (Caddy) and it's needed an update for a while.  Before doing that I checked on the backups to make sure if anything went wrong I could easily restore and, well, f*ck.

    The backup drive on the backup server is not responding at all.  The syslog is full of ZFS deadman events.  And the load average is a personal record, and I've worked on some pretty big servers.

    http://ai.mee.nu/images/UnhappyServer.jpg?size=640x&q=95

    That is not a happy 10-core bunny.

    The backups run A->B->C where A is the active server and C is a an archive server that can collect lots of daily backups and B is broken.  Which means that for, uh, ten weeks, no backups were going off site from that origin server to anywhere.

    So, I arranged three off-site backups and then rebuilt the proxy server with the latest software and the new firewall rules and basically tweaked the config file at random and kept restarting it until it all worked.  I don't know why that was necessary, but it was.  At least I could flick the routes back and forth internally and didn't need to wait for DNS to update.

    Then back to the backup server.  Look at the I/O stats.  It's written how much data?  18 petabytes?  No wonder it's not working, the SSD must be fried.

    Wait...  Insert commas manually.  18 terabytes.  That's not much at all.

    Kill the stuck processes (all 24,000 of them).  Load average goes up.  Kill the parent process...  Load goes up even more.

    Guess it's reboot time.

    And...  It sits there with ping working but no other sign of life for ten minutes.  (This one doesn't have a remote console either.  I grabbed it during the datacenter fire last year and took what I could get.)

    It does have a button to remotely power cycle the server but the page asks you not to do that if the server can ping because they'd rather have a technician look at it before the evidence of whatever the problem was disappears.

    So I start writing a tech support ticket and just as I'm about to submit it the server comes back up and is working perfectly as if there was never anything wrong.

    Okay.

    How was your evening?

    * Not everyone.


  • Twitter is adding an edit button, maybe.  (The Verge)



    "Protecting the integrity of that public conversation" is of course Newspeak for eradicating dissent.

Tech News


Disclaimer: No, we are not having fun yet.

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Tuesday, April 05

Geek

Daily News Stuff 5 April 2022

Oh Hi Edition

Top Story


Tech News



Disclaimer: Bah.

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Monday, April 04

Geek

Daily News Stuff 4 April 2022

Third Charm's The Strange Edition 

Top Story

  • Looks like house #3 might be the one.  I've mentioned place a couple of times - it's a modern 4 bedroom place, with a garage the size of a small house and a house the size of two small houses.

    That garage is 23 x 42 feet, not counting a storeroom / workshop area off to one side and a small bathroom on the other.  That should suffice.  And it has windows on two sides so it's not a complete cave.


  • The internet is not what you think it is  (Princeton)

    Oh?
    Many think of the internet as an unprecedented and overwhelmingly positive achievement of modern human technology.
    Who?


Tech News



Disclaimer: 6pm is the new 8pm.  Yay.

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Life

Third Time's The Charm?

Got the contract back for house #3.

My lawyer read through and had a couple of comments but saw no real issues.  I took a look through and I agree.

So it looks like I might be buying not a lovingly renovated 19th century cottage, but instead a modern house with twice the floor area and easily six times the storage space I have now.  And views for miles, which is what drew me to this one over other similar properties.

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Sunday, April 03

Geek

Daily News Stuff 3 April 2022

Prajecyrujučy Sinhuliarnaje Wypramieńwańnie Daktryny Absaliutnaha J Usiopahłynaĺnaha Zła Skroź Šaścihrannuju Pryzmu Sîn-Ahhī-Erība Na Hipierpawierchniu Zadyjakaĺnaha Kaŭčęha Zasnawaĺnikaŭ Kosmatęchničnaha Ordęna Palieakantakta, Najstaražytnyja Ipastasi Dawosiewych Cywilizacyj Prywodziać U Ruch Ręzanansny Transfarmatar Časowapadobnaj Biaskoncaści Budučyni U Ćwiardyniach Absierwatoryi Nwn-Hu-Kek-Amon, Uwasabliajučy Ŭ Ęfirnuju Matęryju Prach Ałulima Na Zachad Ad Ękzapłaniety Edition

Top Story



Questions and Answers

  • From golfman:
    Since you mentioned VPN. Is it worth it for regular ole intertube surfers that do pay some bills online? If so, which do you suggest?
    Definitely not any of the free ones. There's a reason they're free.

    The gold standard is ProtonVPN, but that's overkill for just paying bills online. In fact, unless you're paying bills online using public wifi, you should be fine without a VPN at all.


  • From Daniel Ream:
    Since Ubiquiti seems to be a bunch of dumbf*cks now - I have an ER-X and an old AC Lite AP. They've served me well enough but I'm thinking of upgrading. Having been a network/sysadmin in a former life I liked the prosumer level of customizability. Is there a good company out there that makes similar reliable hardware I can configure at a low level? Please note I'm not interested in doinking around with custom open source firmware, it never lives up to the hype.
    Good question.

    Don't know.

    I was looking for a central switch for the new house and was considering Ubiquiti. Now, of course, I'm not.

    But what else is there in the professional-but-not-enterprise space? I'll need to do some research.


  • From antisocial justice beatnik:
    Anyone here use Skiff? It's selling itself as an end-to-end encrypted replacement for Goolag Docs. Sounds interesting but I've not yet tried it myself.
    When anything's free you have to look for the catch, but in this case they're pretty obviously trying to push users onto their paid plans.

    Which is fine.

    I don't know how well it works, but given the rate at which Google is rotting from within, it's worth a look.


  • From buzzion:
    Hey Pixy, so the other day you mentioned Youtube getting a bunch of free movies and TV shows but it wasn't really released anywhere.
    Might want to try this? Here are their free to watch movies. https://tinyurl.com/2jyp9mbm
    And here are there free to watch tv shows. https://tinyurl.com/bddmfyy4
    There is a chance you might not be able to see them since you're in Australia. The shows don't really impress me, though I may decide to watch Andromeda from the beginning.
    Yes, I had found links to the movies and TV sections.

    The problem is the movie link (yours is different but displays the same selection in the end) only displays about 10% of the available content - you can't scroll or search for more, you just get whatever 10% they choose to show you.

    And the TV link doesn't work for me in Australia. Yours gives me a blank page; the one I found elsewhere actually gives me a purple monkey error.


  • From crasey"
    Any news on updating the broken "access comments" link from minx.cc to acecomments.mu.nu?
    Sorry about the delays. It's not that hard to fix by I'm a little distracted just now.


  • From Clover4Leaf:
    I'm considering upgrading from 500GB to 2TB M.2 NVM in my new Dell laptop running Win10Pro. According to Dell's upgrade options, I need to get a PCIe Gen4 M.2 if I go to 2TB. I'm about to pull trigger and buy a Samsung 980 Pro, but I've heard concerns about heat on larger M.2 NVMs.
    Is heat something I should be concerned about and only upgrade to 1TB Gen3 M.2 NVM, which is a Dell supported upgrade option?
    I can speak with reasonably authority here because I just recently opened up a Dell laptop and swapped the existing 500GB M.2 drive for a 4TB PCIe 3.0 model.

    Works fine.

    Well, the first time around it didn't boot, but I opened it up again, wiggled things around, and it was fine after that.

    Heat is an issue for PCIe 4.0 drives. It won't overheat your laptop but the drive itself might slow down. High-end desktop SSDs now come with heatsinks, but obviously that won't fit in a laptop.
    Also, I have Acronis Cyber Protect Home Office which has a disk migration capability. I read that they can't migrate a disk that has Win10 BitLocker enabled, which is currently enabled.
    Can I just disable BitLocker on my current drive, migrate to the larger NVM and then reenable BitLocker on the larger NVM when I install it?
    Very good question and I have no idea. I did a fresh install of mine and avoided all that.


  • From Nemo:
    Pixy, I like my Kindle's hardware, but detest its OS - in particular, the fact that there is no way to snitching to amazon about what I've been reading, other than putting it on airplane mode permanently. So, I've been thinking of replacing it with a tablet. My needs are modest: to read e-books, listen to music, watch the occasional movie, surf the web, and read email. My requirements are that should be small enough that I can read it easily while lying in bed (so I can read without disturbing my wife), and that it run Linux (preferably Ubuntu - and yes, I can do the installation myself, assuming I can root the thing). And also, cheaper is better. If you have any suggestions or recommendations, I'd appreciate it if you'd share them.
    There are not a lot of good small tablets around at the moment. I have the Lenovo Tab M8 FHD and I'm happy with it for the price. 3GB RAM, 32GB storage, microSD slot, 8 core A53, and a quite good 1920x1200 screen.


    It reportedly can be unlocked and reimaged, but I haven't tried it myself.


  • From Big D:
    I have a similar question to Nemo's: I would like an e-reader that does a good job with pdfs, doesn't spy on me excessively, and either has copious fixed storage or (preferably) expandable storage via an internal card reader or an external USB-C reader. And, finally, the most difficult requirement: that it not cost significantly more than a cheap laptop that would vastly outperform it in every category *except* power consumption.
    I've heard claims that you need a 10" Android-based e-reader in order to effectively read pdfs, but most of those are well into the laptop price-range.
    You probably don't want the Lenovo Tab M8 FHD for this; the old A53 cores are underpowered for handling PDFs.

    The Galaxy Tab A8, apart from the larger 10" screen, has the A75 core which will be more than twice as fast for things like viewing PDFs.


  • From rd:
    Help! After I hit post on a comment, the new comment page appears as http, not a secure https page.
    Right, I know what's going on there. I'll fix that.


  • From davogeek:
    In one of your prior posts you mentioned you do a lot of work with NFTs. I work with a disabled veterans charity and was contemplating using a series of NFTs as a funding source to advance their work....any suggestions...
    My advice with regards to fundraising using NFTs is not to do it.

    Which is my advice for pretty much everything relating to blockchains.


Tech News

  • Vizio TVs now have software that wll display additional ads over live TV. (Flat Panels HD)

    Makes the case better than I could myself to just buy a large-format computer monitor. Vizio makes significantly more money from advertising than from selling their products, so this is only going to get worse.


  • American Express: Don't leave home. (Bleeping Computer)

    American Express went down.

    Worldwide, apparently.

    Including the mobile app, their online account pages, and internal phone system, which is a pretty spectacular level of fail.


  • Horrible corner cases when dealing with music. (Artificial truth)
    My favourite: a band named brouillard, with a single member called brouillard, whose every single album is named brouillard, and of course, so is every track.
    I can see how that might be mildly irritating.


Disclaimer: Mildly irritating like ghost peppers to the eyes.

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Saturday, April 02

Geek

Daily News Stuff 2 April 2022

And Now We Wait Edition

Top Story

  • It's the weekend again - somehow - and that means it's Question and Answer time.  Take one of the bottles from the basket, put your question inside, and cast it into the waters.  It will probably just wash straight back up on the beach, but if it does make it here to PixyLab I will attempt to answer.


  • No news on house #3 yet.  The one that was previously #4 on my shortlist has actually sold, but I wasn't actively pursuing that one because while the renovated interiors were first rate, the location (between an iron foundry and an artillery range) was less than ideal.


  • 123qweQWE!@#0.  (Bleeping Computer)

    GitLab had a default test password configured for accounts registered via external authentication providers.  They say no accounts have been compromised, but the bug affects not only the cloud service, but the paid on-premises version and the free open source edition, so if you run your own it's time to update.

    Also, put it behind a firewall.  At my day job your VPN account has to be configured to grant access the the GitLab server before you can do anything at all.


Tech News



Definitely Not Tech News

  • Some of you expressed interest in the cover home of The Concise Dictionary of Regrettable Architecture (4th ed, Stodder & Houghton, 3716pp) as mentioned in yesterday's Pixy Goes House Hunting item.

    Well, here's one of the bathrooms:

    http://ai.mee.nu/images/Regret1.jpg?size=560x&q=95

    After looking at several late 19th to early 20th century homes that have been lovingly restored (and one that is a complete dump but is heritage listed and so frozen in time as a complete dump) this place comes across like a big bowl of curried corn flakes.

    Every single pixel asks the question why?  

    And that's the bathroom they they selected to show off the property.  If this was a modest three-bedroom place passed down in the family for 65 years and now on the market for the first time, sure.  Buy it, replace the kitchen, bathroom, and carpet, strip off the wallpaper and paint everything left white, and you'd have yourself a little gem.

    For this one, the owner would have to be someone prepared to drop an additional half a mil to gut it and rebuild from the inside out.

    In other words, not me.


Disclaimer: Kellogg's Curried Corn Flakes: Not part of this complete breakfast if you value your intestinal integrity.

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Friday, April 01

Geek

Daily News Stuff 1 April 2022

Not Making This Up Edition

Top Story

  • I have my agent checking the contract on my first alternate now.  Assuming there's no major issues and no-one has already grabbed it (and there's no indication of that so far), I'm prepared to go over asking price if needed, because this one has the right combination of being ready to move right in and have the potential for improvement - because you could park a freight train in the garage.

    Speaking of which, the craziest damn house popped up in my tracker just now.  Seven bedrooms, three bathrooms, four living rooms, two kitchens, two laundries, nine car spaces, five minute easy walk through the park to the shops, and in my price range.

    Except (a) it's for auction at at the end of the month so who knows what the final price will be, and (b) it was built in 1957 and could grace the cover of a James Lileks book with the word "regrettable" in the title.


  • CNN+, the new pre-failed streaming service from the former news network, is planning to sell NFTs of its first half hour of content.  (Ace of Spades)

    If this doesn't kill NFTs I think they might be immortal.

    What are NFTs, you ask?

    Well, think of a baseball card.  It doesn't have any special intrinsic value - it's just a piece of cardboard.  It doesn't give you any influence over the player, of course, or let you attend a game.  It's just a piece of cardboard.

    Now, imagine a digital baseball card - it's just a file on a computer somewhere.

    An NFT is like a digital version of a photocopy of a 3x5" index card that lists the address of the locker at the bus station containing the baseball card, so that if you remember the locker combination you can take it out and, um, put it into another locker, with the added bonus that eight billion people with hacksaws and power drills have easy 24x7 access to the bus station, and even so, there are people willing to spend six figures on these damn things.

    I can only sleep at night by telling myself that it's probably mostly money laundering and what these people really do for a living is something relatively wholesome like smuggling heroin or land mines or endangered monkeys or maybe all three each nested inside the other like so many addictive explosive hyperactive Russian dolls.

    Because, yes, my job is mostly NFTs these days.

    Which is why I can afford a seven bedroom house - albeit in a country town; this thing would be eight figures easy if it was in an upmarket suburb in Sydney - but I'd almost sooner live in a cardboard van by a cardboard river.


Tech News

Disclaimer: I'm holding out for extremely weird.

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