Enekk

joined 1 year ago
[–] Enekk 8 points 10 months ago

Met my wife in highschool and got married right out of college. We are now pushing 40 and are still happy and content. We were lucky, we grew together and in similar ways, but we also just knew when we knew. We even had twins a few years back and even the stress of that didn't destroy us.

We (hopefully) still have many years together and maybe things will break down, but, so far, neither of us regret marrying so young.

[–] Enekk 5 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)
[–] Enekk 6 points 1 year ago

I respectfully disagree with one major caveat. I'll get that out of the way first; I think there should be a name for these foods that recognize the creators (e.g. Italian American food is American food that comes from Italian immigrants). We've traditionally been bad at giving credit or, worse, using names to mark a cuisine as "other" and weird.

The thing is that there really isn't a food of a place. People use ingredients that are available and use techniques from the people around them. When cultures interact, they create remixes of cuisine that take unfamiliar ingredients and techniques and create something new.

Let me use the food of my own home, New Mexico, as an example. The food of the region is a mixture of Spanish colonizers, later Mexican immigrants, and Native American foods using a crazy combination of techniques and ingredients from all three. It isn't Spanish food. It isn't Mexican food. It isn't Native American food. It is New Mexican food, a thing that arose from a place and its history. Now, with Asian immigrants moving in, the food has started to incorporate stuff from those cultures too.

[–] Enekk 1 points 1 year ago

Thanks so much!

[–] Enekk 3 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I'm forced to use a Mac for work as well and have the damn Slack bug. What's the solution!?

[–] Enekk 4 points 1 year ago

Interestingly, they were designed for warmer environments where Kinder eggs would melt. The fact that they circumvented the weird US restrictions was a side effect.

[–] Enekk 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Best I can do is die on shift.

I once worked a job where this was nearly literally true. Were I to die on shift, my life insurance would pay double.

[–] Enekk 8 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

The attack vector is as follows:

  1. Evil.com phishes a user and asks for username and password for Good.com
  2. Evil.com immediately relays those credentials to Good.com
  3. Good.com asks Evil.com for TOTP
  4. Evil.com asks victim for TOTP
  5. Evil.com relays TOTP to Good.com and does a complete account takeover

The various physical dongles prevent this by using the asking domain as part of the hash. If you activated the dongle on Evil.com, it'll do nothing on Good.com (except hopefully alerting the SOC at Good.com about a compromised username and password pair).

[–] Enekk 29 points 1 year ago (1 children)
[–] Enekk 3 points 1 year ago

There is actually woman pages if you have Emacs installed (which used to be the norm). It stands for WithOut Man Pages: https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_mono/woman.html

[–] Enekk 2 points 1 year ago

Better question, why is it throwing a shadow?

[–] Enekk 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Because most things like this are measured in average power per year and it is useful for comparison. Different technologies produce energy at different rates. Solar, only when the sun is up. How would you compare it to wind which has different rules?

Taken to an extreme, consider some hypothetical new technology that produced 50 Gigawatts of energy, but did it in a second and then took a year to recharge before doing it again. Would it be more useful to say it had a 50 Gigawatt capacity or that it provided 50 Gigawatts of power per year when trying to compare it to other technologies?

Edit: I hope nobody would use my hypothetical technology... Boom!

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