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/

@unascribed (though the conversion isn't exactly the same.)

@unascribed Or Furlongs per Firkin, if you want to use the mass of the fuel rather than the volume. With pints you're really hand-waving out an additional "at X temperature" factor.

ATTENTION EVERYONE WRINGING THEIR HANDS OVER “ ADMINS CAN READ MY DIRECT MESSAGES”: have *always* been able to read your and DMs unless encrypted, including at the big and Internet providers. We used to have t-shirts that said, “I READ YOUR EMAIL.”

It’s just hitting now because you got used to places where the admins were kept away in their cubicles and data centers instead of greeting you at the front door.

@survey Arch based Artix on my desktop, mix of Arch, Debian, and BSD for my other systems.

@ademalsasa $80 for 400 down 20 up, unlimited.

This is an old project, but by some miracle it's still working and I woke up this morning wanting to celebrate the things I love more.

This Inkplate e-ink screen shows Conway's Game of Life, seeded from tarpits I have on the Internet. The tarpits are programs on my computer that superficially look like insecure Telnet and Remote Desktop services, but actually exist to respond super slowly and make bots scanning the Internet 'get stuck'.

When a bot connects to the tarpit, the data it sends gets squished into a 5x5 grid and 'stamped' onto a Game of Life board. Data from a bot at the IP address 1.1.x.x will get stamped on the top left corner, data from a bot at 254.254.x.x will get stamped on the bottom right corner.

Conway's Game of Life, a set of simple rules that govern whether cells should turn on or off, updates the display once per second. The result is that bot attacks end up appearing as distinct 'creatures', that get bigger and more angry looking over time (as their centre is updated with new data). After the attack finishes, the 'creature' eventually burns itself out.

Despite that description, it's a really chill piece of art that doesn't draw too much attention but I can happily watch for a long time.

Credit for the idea goes to @_mattata, I had been wanting to make a real-life version of XKCD #350 for years before seeing his Botnet Fishbowl project.

#projects #inkplate #esp32 #eink #infosec #tarpit
E-ink screen in a frame, with a Conway's Game of Life grid on it. There is a cluster of activity happening on the left side of the grid, representing an ongoing bot attack.

@rc2014 Reminds me of industrial PLCs. And also a bit of Amiga sidecars.

@gat @ThatWouldBeTelling In this manga he actually takes a trip to the US at least to pick up the firearms, and to fulfill the requests of the isekaied american Hero character (from Utah.) Gives the hero's family money and collects some of his items from the hero's family (including his rifle and other weapons.) So it might make sense that he has US weapons. The thing that was dumb was that the guns were firing the entire cartridge out instead of just the bullet.

Was reading a manga called "Sen no Sukiru o Motsu Otoko" and chapter 41 is a definite "tell me you don't understand firearms without telling me you don't understand firearms" moment...

@iamtakingiteasy @nosherwan @pro I imagine if my storage started getting filled up, I'd slide into the "don't care" category more. Might be useful to find a way to archive them to an offline instance though that doesn't federate on its own, if such a thing were possible. My home internet connection isn't good enough to run an online instance on, but I have several terabytes of storage on my home network.

@union All about standing out to people. Online applications are automatically sorted and you have to be exceptional to stand out in them, or if they need to hire more people than they got applications. If you can't stand out in your resume, then you need to stand out in making personal connections instead.

@pro @nosherwan You might follow more people than I do then. I only have a handful of accounts and am only following ~50 people total I think. I imagine if you're following more active people and viewing more threads, it may be pulling and caching more data from other servers.

@jplebreton Perhaps a redirect private key that could be used to setup on a new instance, notify followers, and retrieve any cached messages still stored on other instances. Keeping a backup of your posts though is a useful thing to do in either case, even if an instance going down instantly can leave you without an easy way to redirect your followers.

@pro @nosherwan Also though, I just checked and the part of that attributable to Pleroma is maybe 700mb. About 400mb in /var where the database is, and 265ish mb in /opt where pleroma is installed. Half of the 4.3 gigs is /usr for distro-installed packages.

@nosherwan I'm on the Pleroma front end, I like it a little bit better. You can actually use both of them at the same time if you want though.

@pro @nosherwan I'm at 4.3 gigs out of the 24g on my $8 instance at prgmr/tornado.

@PonyPanda @moth @NEETzsche @union No argument from me on most of that, I think I've heard that they're starting to redeploy some of them north and east, but that will take some time. Russia's still hurting for logistics for now in the area, but they're on a fairly defensible line there now so they can re-deploy extras east faster than Ukraine can. I think the Kherson line might stay where it is for awhile, but we'll see.

@nosherwan I initially ran Mastodon on 2gb, it worked smoothly, though it did seem like it was using a fair bit of ram and not leaving a ton for Cache. Now I'm on Pleroma and it's using less than 1gb on my 2gb instance, and has more than a gig for cache space.

@ademalsasa @sesivany Really though, if you had taken hubzilla and followed a lot of people on mastodon, you might have accomplished the same thing, since it's the same group of people. I link up to everyone on mastodon from here from my little Pleroma instance.

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