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Cake day: July 28th, 2023

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  • Doubletwist@lemmy.worldtoProgrammer Humor@programming.devGoogling
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    4 months ago

    Not only is “Googling” one of my most important job skills, now that I’m doing professional services, my entire job basically consist of “Learn product ${FOO} faster than the customer’s employees can.” Which of course primarily consists of knowing what to search for, how to find it, and how to interpret and use what I find.







  • Yes and no. For the clouds that we did have, yes, the eclipse was enough to affect those.

    However, for the clouds that we had earlier in the day, and that had been predicted that we might have, would have been far too heavy for eclipse to effect. Unfortunately my sister up in New York ended up in that situation, where it was far too heavy a cloud cover so they didn’t get to see anything. We had been predicted that we might have that, but that’s the manner in which we got lucky.



  • Doubletwist@lemmy.worldtoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldSoftware vs Hardware RAID
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    9 months ago

    Y’all must be doing something wrong because HW raid has been hot garbage for at least 20years. I’ve been using software raid (mdadm, ZFS) since before 2000 and have never had a problem that could be attributed to the software raid itself, while I’ve had all kinds of horrible things go wrong with HW raid. And that holds true not just at home but professionally with enterprise level systems as a SysAdmin.

    With the exception of the (now rare) bare metal windows server, or the most basic boot drive mirroring for VMware (with important datastores on NAS/SAN which are using software raid underneath, with at most some limited HW assisted accelerators) , hardly anyone has trusted hardware raid for decades.


  • One way or the other, you’re paying every month. Either it’s rent (paying for the landlord’s house, including taxes, insurance and interest), or you’re paying towards your own. The general populous has never really been able to buy a house outright. One way or another you’re mortgaging your time to spread out the time to either pay for a house, or pay for property and building your own.

    Yes, people have been going WAY to far into debt, pushing the size and prices of houses to unsustainable levels. Hell my mom grew up just fine with 5ppl (2 parents, 3 kids) in an 800sqft house (plus a tiny finished attic) with 1 bathroom. Nobody really needs 2500-4000sqft houses.

    But even if we go back to reasonably sized homes, in no realistic world are mortgages going away.

    The best you can hope for is to live as cheaply as possible to save up a large down payment (and emergency fund), and buy only as much house as you really need, for as little interest as you can manage, and then pay it off as quickly as you can.








  • Well, like it or not, that’s the system we have right now, and so long as it is, by the time the main election comes around, the only options are a) violent overthrow, b) abstain from voting, or c) vote for the least bad option presented.

    I don’t think we’re quite to the point yet where violent overthrow is necessary or justified.

    Abstaining just means you accept whatever the outcome is, and thus have no leg to stand on when you don’t like the outcome.

    In my mind that leaves option c as the only valid option, with the added requirement of working in between elections towards pushing for changes in the voting system.

    I don’t pretend to be a fan of Biden. But despite his shortcomings, he’s still a damn sight better than Trump or RFK Jr. And nobody else running has a snowball’s chance in hell, and most of them are crackpots anyway. So until such a time as we have better options, I will continue to vote for the least bad option.


  • It has ALWAYS been too expensive for the vast majority of Americans to rent their own place, for ALL the generations.

    My greatest/silent generation grandparents never had their own places.

    My boomer parents never rented their own place solo.

    My Gen-X ass has only rented my own place for 1 brief 6month period in a VERY low cost of living area, and then again for a couple years after a divorce at which time I was 20years into a very high paying career, so I don’t think it’s a terribly valid example for the majority of Americans.

    I’m not saying housing costs aren’t too high, they absolutely are! But this is nothing new. And frankly it’s annoying to keep seeing it posted and harped on constantly as I see it as a distraction from real issues that need to be addressed in the areas of housing costs, pay and healthcare costs that need to be fixed.