punkcoder

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] punkcoder 3 points 3 days ago

“You see, it’s a well-known fact that the coasts are lousy with ‘em,” said the old fishing captain, with the semi-circle of children sitting around to hear their adopted uncle tell them stories around the campfire. This was the annual tradition around the homestead, something that had been passed down through the generations. Getting this next generation ready to set sail for their first time on the boats. A sort of good-natured hazing designed to make them cautious and aware of the dangers that the sea had always presented to them. “Sirens, yeh getta keep an ear out for their song. Get too close and thern song will pull yuh into the rocks. There you’ll crash upon the rocks and find your ways the the abyss below.”

Fascinated by the tales that the old sailor was spinning, their eyes transfixed, and every mouth was agape in fear. Well beyond his prime, his grey stubble and sun-baked skin gave every ounce of authenticity that someone could look for in a teller of tales. Had the telling been outside of this village, the adults would have been absolutely aghast at him telling these stories as though they were true. But this was not that place, and those were not those people.

“You see, sailors and boatmen only come in two stages, young and old. The ones that can’t make it as sailors, the ones that die out on those waters. They leave behind their families, and sometimes a wife can’t take the troubles of missing him, and in a fit of madness, they will run into the waters to try to claim them back. But you see, it doesn’t work like that; the sea offers to keep them together, only it doesn’t give the husband back, but he takes the wife too and makes her sing to call her husband home. Sometimes it works, but all too often it makes more widows.”

Part of the story was true; there had always been sirens on the coast of the small towns. Small villages spread over the ten miles that lead to the small fishing village. But everyone in the village knew how to co-exist with their ocean-bound neighbors. They had all become close through time but not too close in their relationships. It was said that they were so good at the work that they managed to make sure that not a single boat not intended to get to the island had ever landed on its shores. There were other parts of the story that were mostly true; it wasn’t always wives sometimes, it was husbands, though that seldom made it into the stories. Some reason that detail always seems to fall off.

But nothing on earth was as effective at getting them to shut up as outshining them. If you want to upset a siren, all you have to do is break out some old blue eyes at the right key, and they will listen to you all day. That was the secret of the village, something that they never let the outsiders know because with that secret, the sailors that would approach the shoreline, not knowing how to deal with the sirens, would run their boat ashore and die in the process. They had functioned like a blessing and a curse to the village, but more than anything, their mythology and existence had become just a part of the village.

But tomorrow, the kids would take to the water with their parents, and they would see them firsthand and probably get to meet some of them. But for tonight and only tonight the ghost stories would keep them in the mood and build the excitement for tomorrow's journey.

[–] punkcoder 7 points 1 week ago

This reminds me of the quote:

“If I have one message to give to the secular American people, it’s that the world is not divided into countries. The world is not divided between East and West. You are American, I am Iranian, we don’t know each other, but we talk together and we understand each other perfectly. The difference between you and your government is much bigger than the difference between you and me. And the difference between me and my government is much bigger than the difference between me and you. And our governments are very much the same.”

  • Marjane Satrapi
[–] punkcoder 7 points 2 weeks ago

When companies are failing, they move into acquisitions to prevent competition from outpacing them. The Republicans are quickly learning that everybody else is ahead of us, and to deafen that they think making a play to acquire them, will be something that they can do.

[–] punkcoder 15 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Please get it out of your mind that there is anything here about justice… it’s not about justice, it’s about power. It always has been, the continued fake shock of this only continues to be unproductive whining. There is no one that is confused about this, there are those who see it for what it is and those who are willingly ignorant.

[–] punkcoder 5 points 1 month ago

If the CPU has less than 200 cores, I’m out.

[–] punkcoder 9 points 2 months ago

Oh my god now way…

[–] punkcoder 1 points 2 months ago
[–] punkcoder 10 points 2 months ago (3 children)

no one cares what that one dude in Sandwhich, Il thinks.

[–] punkcoder 2 points 2 months ago

this absolutely fits into the category of “what the hell did I just watch” and “can I add it to my Steam list”? It looks like its going to be a Gonzo Fever dream that I am 100% there for.

[–] punkcoder 7 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I like to pay taxes. With them, I buy civilization. - Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.

[–] punkcoder 6 points 3 months ago

“mac it so”, but seriously why…

question #2 can it play doom

[–] punkcoder 1 points 3 months ago

The main problem is that when you use the same tools that you use at work for your game, then your game starts to feel like work.

2
Marble hornets/totheark (www.youtube.com)
 

Not sure where I was when this one came out but it seems to be pretty classic, I completely missed it the first time around so thought that I would share with others.

 

Thought that I would kick off the traditional thread stating that DEFCON is cancelled this year.

18
Building a tool (test.gamemasterdesign.com)
submitted 8 months ago by punkcoder to c/dnd
 

Hopefully I'm not breaking any rules about self promotion or any other nonsense. If so let me know and I will either modify or remove.

I have recently found myself unemployed and I am going through and trying to work with a new programming stack that I haven't worked with in the past. Not sure what I am going to do with it yet, but I was hoping that there might be some people who are interested in trying it out.

In the past I have utilized other tools for tracking the content of my worlds, but I never found one that really worked for me. The last one that I ended up working with was worldanvil. The tools is amazing.... but, I found myself spending more time trying to make things look better than actually writing content. So here is my crack at things, you can register and poke around, if you have any thoughts for things that you would like to see let me know, not sure if I'm going to fully stand it up as a hosted things or maybe dump it as a docker container.

Thoughts and feedback would be greatly appreaciated.

 

Test-Driven Development (TDD) is a development methodology that prioritizes writing tests for code before the code itself, followed by writing the code to pass those tests. This approach not only ensures the functionality of the code but also presents an opportunity to address security concerns, particularly validation bugs, early in the development process.

 

In the last blog we talked about what everyone assumed was the most boring topic that you could talk about, keeping your dependencies up to date. But I think I’ve got it topped this time, this time we are going to be talking about that number one thing that all developers love spending their time working on... Logging.

 

The differences between application security and developer security are simple enough in principle, but go significantly further as soon as you get past the surface. Many people in the cyber security community seem to place a great emphasis on the effectiveness of application security but in many cases, will completely negate the secondary portion of this which is securing the individual who is responsible for introducing security bugs to the software. I'm not saying that to be harsh, mistakes are a simple part of life and without the proper tooling and education it is very easy to continue to produce mistakes especially when greeted with constricted timelines and consistent budget crunch.

 

Every time that there is a leak like this it's infinitely aggravating how the spin department tries to downplay what happened. If you are using SMS based MFA you probably want to stop doing that now.

 

A distributed framework, for mobile first development. Still heavily under development, there is a video out there on YT and I will link once it hits infocon.org.

presentation

1
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by punkcoder to c/thenetbeyond
 

I love the decentralized web, I left the others and came to the new sites... We know that there will only be a matter of time before there is the next 'we've had enough' moment, so what are the things that we can do to help build the technologies to be ready for it?

I think it's important that there be a rich culture that is approachable, but that doesn't mimic what the other platforms do. Lemmy won't have the numbers that the other site has. But surely we have more to offer that isn't memes of cans of beans.

2
Somnium DreamViewer (yt3.googleusercontent.com)
17
Digital Trash Heap (self.selfhosted)
submitted 1 year ago by punkcoder to c/selfhosted
 

So here’s the problem that I have, I have several generations of back ups, which are currently taking over huge amounts of space on my NAS server. I want to be able to go through and process all of the files that are on it while the duplicating, and possibly going through and tagging any files that I find that are helpful. Is anyone aware of a good tool to help accomplish this task. Again because of the nature of the backups, I don’t want to utilize any software I’m not running locally.

Thanks in advance.

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