Alcun Atirutan BBS

Alcun Atirutan BBS

Kazriko | @kazriko@alcatir.com

The usual. Software developer, former BBS sysop. Atari XE, Dos, OS/2, BeOS, Windows 2000/7 former user, Linux/FreeBSD/Haiku/OpenIndiana current user. The various places I post are listed: https://arkaic.com/

@avia Yes, though it's still not the camshaft so it's something that I wasn't figuring into the calculations. There's a channel that I follow that used a Subaru CVT valve replacement as an example, and said that you should always replace the entire valve body instead of just the failed valve, because of all the other costs of taking the CVT apart, you don't want to pay those costs twice, so just replace everything that is a potential wear item. IE the entire valve body.

@avia Ahhh, that makes more sense then, I thought just the camshaft would be 12k. But yeah, labor on things like that is a hassle unless you're able to do it yourself.

@avia For just a camshaft? Steep.

@pro I'm on prgmr.com, it's a reasonably cheap host that's in Hurricane Electric's datacenter in San Jose, CA. I'm paying $5 per month for this host, but I am using a very light weight OS for it. They have plans up to 15 gigs of ram, but those are out of my price range. I originally went with them because they had native IPv6 subnets. Usual caveats about tiny companies possibly disappearing apply, but they've been around for 18 years so far.

@deprecated_ii @zaitcev Yeah, I would think that the missile would have to stumble on a side note to see it, rather than it just kind of being visible from the air like old portable sat phones.

@zaitcev @deprecated_ii I wonder if antiradiation missiles could detect starlink, it does beamforming so it should only really have a strong EM node pointing at the satellite, rather than just broadcast upward like sat phones.

@anime @ic3l9 @Moon Also from Japan

@fribbledom Yay, now I'll have to get people to email me instead of talk to me to distinguish bhyve and beehive. :)

@union Are they talking about them using it internationally, or internally? I was thinking that they were referring to them using these internally to their own citizens to justify it.

@union https://www.vice.com/en/article/7kb75e/the-internet-is-debunking-russian-war-propaganda-in-real-time I don't know how much you trust this particular site, but it talks about this incident.

@Cheeseness @Mayana @tulpa With Deb packages at least, a lot of devs make third party repos to add in, so you're not strictly tied to just what is in the Debian or Ubuntu repositories.

@Cheeseness @Mayana @tulpa It also makes some difference as to the availability of packages, but if you're picking Debian or Arch, then they have even more software available than Redhat. It's only the more obscure formats that have worse availability.

@Cheeseness @Mayana @tulpa Makes sense. I'm not sure there's a good option anymore for the redhat package format that isn't in that state with some corporate entity or another.

@Cheeseness @tulpa @Mayana I'd recommend running Gentoo on a secondary system for awhile first, since it's very different from most Linux distros. Debian's a good choice though. Might be more familiar with OpenSUSE coming from a Fedora background as well though since it forked off Redhat ages ago. I find Garuda to be somewhat exciting as well.

@abloo Reject JS, return to Hugo.

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Apparently the guy who translated Isekai Tensei Soudouki on mangadex stopped doing fan translations. I found this that has a few more episodes, not sure how good of a site it is. https://isekaiscanmanga.com/manga/isekai-tensei-soudouki/

@skadi It was kind of one of the first package managers that handled retrieving all of the dependencies and such as well as it did. Back when it was released I think Redhat was just using bare rpm. It's a bit old at this point though. One of the few distros that still has its package management scheme from back when APT was released is Slackware, and pretty much all of them were similar to slackware back then.

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