Lettuceeatlettuce

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 months ago (2 children)

Tubular and NewPipe both barely working all day for me. Maybe 1 out of 10 vids loads. Downloading fails too.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 months ago

Magic Earth works really great for me :)

[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Straw man. I'm encountering sys admins and systems "engineers" who don't know how to spec out a server, don't understand how certificates work, don't understand basic IP addressing principles, don't understand basic networking topology.

They just know how to click a list of specific buttons in a GUI for one specific Corpo vendor.

Maybe that is fine for a Jr. Admin just starting out, but it isn't what you want for the folks in charge of building, upgrading, and maintaining your company's infrastructure.

There's nothing wrong with making interfaces simpler and easier to understand. And there's nothing wrong with building simplified abstractions on top of your systems to gain efficiency. But this should not be done at the cost of actual deep understanding and functionality.

The people you call when things go badly wrong will always be the folks that have that deep understanding and competency. It already has started hitting the developer community in the last few years. The Jr. Devs that did a 3 month boot camp where they learned nothing but how to parrot code and slap APIs together, are getting laid off and cannot find work.

The devs that went to school for Comp Sci, that have years of real world experience, and actually understand the theory and the nuts and bolts of the underlying tech, they are still largely employed and have little trouble finding work.

I think the same will happen soon in the IT world. Deep knowledge and years of dirty, greasy hands will always be desirable over a parrot that only knows how to click GUI buttons in a specific order.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago

Let's hope that people will start to favor on-prem solutions and smaller independent cloud providers vs the massive trillion dollar corpo clouds that control so much now.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 4 months ago (17 children)

Very good read. I totally agree with your sentiment that more and more, "engineering" is becoming just gluing together and managing cloud services and features.

My job as a sys admin has become the same. It's not about actually understanding the technology at a deep level and troubleshooting problems, it's about learning specific applets and features to click on and running down daily and weekly checklists.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Performance and how configurable things are, plus ease of use.

For instance, my default router/modem device from my ISP was super clunky and confusing. I needed to set up some custom port forwarding and firewall rules. The aftermarket router I bought was faster, had way better wireless coverage, and the UI was so much easier to set up the configs I needed.

So it's up to you, from what you said, seems like you probably would be good with the default from your ISP.

[–] [email protected] 23 points 4 months ago

Sure thing...now GPL/Creative Commons all your code involved in any way for your models, documentation, parameters, data sets, and allow full unlimited integration and modification by any parties to any portion of it.

[–] [email protected] 55 points 4 months ago (9 children)

IT workers desperately need to unionize. There is so much bullshit that happens, folks are expected to do three different roles at once, have multiple technical stacks they are experts in, and work extra hours + be on call after hours or on weekends.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 4 months ago

Similar tactic among all the large tech corpos, switch focus to IaaS, PaaS, SaaS, become the backbone of the modern computing landscape.

It's basically a slow switch to becoming critical international infrastructure like power grids, water ways, and gas/oil pipelines.

This all while locking you in as much as possible and milking as much value as they can squeeze.

[–] [email protected] 18 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Here's my twisted life exposed...I have no issue watching 1080p on my QLED 4K TV. I game at 1080p happily, I honestly don't give a shit about 4K content.

1080p looks good enough for me, and I actually watch 720p on my phone screen half the time too.

And not because of lack of speed, I have a 1Gbps+ fiber line up and down.

And tbh, if it means I get to own and control my media, I would tolerate even worse quality if that's what I needed to do.

Grunge computing ftw! Quality at the cost of your soul? Fuck that!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago

It only exists to counter the existing framework. In an ideal world, nobody would honor or respect the idea of "intellectual property" and hence, only fraud would be punished.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 months ago (2 children)

You misunderstand me. When I say, "copyright is bullshit" I don't mean that I don't like it, or that it doesn't work. I mean it's bullshit in the same way that the crystal healing or mushroom cancer therapy is bullshit.

You cannot steal an idea, it's impossible. So creating laws that punish people for doing things like copying a digital file doesn't make sense. Copyright supposedly was created to create an incentive for artists and inventors to make cool and enriching stuff.

But what it actually does is protects business savvy people and allows them to game the system, get first mover advantage over all others, and then punish any potential competitors in that space.

As if nobody was creating artwork or inventing useful devices before copyright law came into being.

Just because something is useful doesn't make it good, atomic bombs are useful, factory farming is useful.

I think the only thing people should be protected from as a creator is fraud. You can copy a person's works and modify or distribute them in any manner you see fit, as long as it's clear that you are not the original creator. You cannot claim to be them or to be affiliated with them unless you actually are.

That is what the principle of copyleft is all about. If copyright worked in principle, then you should see millions of individual creators enriched and protected by it.

But you don't see that, instead, a few giant mega corps and super wealthy tycoons own and control enormous swaths of "intellectual property" and small time creators struggle to make ends meet and are sued into oblivion by the same powerful groups.

Sure it's great for boosting wealth and GDP, but that boost does not apply to most of the population, it applies to the tiny elite that has now captures enormous segments of the market and fight tooth and nail to keep it that way.

Copyright is structurally flawed, it doesn't work because it cannot work. It's fundamentally based on a the nonsensical concept of "intellectual property" which as I said at the beginning, is bullshit.

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