- 3 Posts
- 59 Comments
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•AMD's legacy Ryzen 7 5800X3D chips now sell for up to $800, more than a new 9800X3D — AM4 chip costs twice as much as MSRP, as enthusiasts flock to old DDR4 memoryEnglish
16·1 month agoI have an old blade server that I got from work many years ago. I never set it up but just opened it up to see what’s in it and discovered it had DDR2 memory. Interested?
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Is gamedev a good hobby? or should i try something else?English
9·1 month agoA hobby is “good” if you enjoy it. That’s all that matters with hobbies. Don’t look down on yourself for wanting to do something for fun. It doesn’t have to be “efficient” or turn into an income or anything else. Just try it and learn. Learn the skills, learn if you like it
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•[Meta] Ban unsubstantiated rumours?English
16·1 month agoI agree with this in principle. I think a tag like “rumor” might be useful as a first step? Escalate if it becomes more of a problem.
It may also be worth differentiating between a rumor and a rumor. A rumor of AMD coming out with XYZ at CES is different from “some random website is claiming that HL3 is days away from being announced”
LLMs don’t “understand” anything. They are predicting what text matches your prompt. If you don’t understand what an AI is saying, it’s not saying anything
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Valve: HDMI Forum Continues to Block HDMI 2.1 for LinuxEnglish
3·2 months agoIf I’m a TV manufacturer, I have less incentive to have both connector types because it increases cost and complexity while only appealing to a very small subset of users. It will take leadership at those companies to take a bit of a leap of faith that the effort is valuable as a long term plan because it will take other manufacturers to make the ecosystem. Couple that with the fact that leadership at companies tend to not be enthusiasts or technically inclined and it makes it difficult, but not impossible. I really hope we can move electronics towards DisplayPort just so it’s an open standard instead of the HDMI for-profit model.
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Valve: HDMI Forum Continues to Block HDMI 2.1 for LinuxEnglish
111·2 months agoI agree with the sentiment but we’re dealing with a chicken and egg problem. If no TVs have DisplayPort, who would buy a console that can’t be used with their TV?
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
News@lemmy.world•A teenager redrew the Alabama voting map – and it’s now state lawEnglish
241·2 months ago… one that had been submitted by an anonymous member of the public, known only by their initials, “DD”.
The decision stunned “DD” – an 18-year-old freshman at the University of Alabama named Daniel DiDonato …
“Anonymous”?
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•What are some of the worst code you have seen in a production environment?English
22·2 months agoA data ingestion service that was processing ~15 billion logs each day that was duplicating each of those logs 2-4 times in memory as a part of the filtering logic. No particular reason nor need to do it. When I profiled the system it was BY FAR the largest hog of CPU and memory.
The engineer who wrote it once argued with me about writing comparisons a == b vs b == a because one was technically more efficient … in a language we weren’t using.
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•What are some of the worst code you have seen in a production environment?English
33·2 months agoOur CFO’s social security number, contact info, and just about everything you’d need to impersonate them inside a random shell script that was being passed around like drugs at a party for anyone to use. Oh and it had an API key to our payments processor hard coded into it.
That was the tip of the iceberg of how bad the systems were at the company. All of these are from the same company:
- A fintech based company with no billing team
- An event system that didn’t event
- A permissions system that didn’t administer permissions
- A local cache for authentication sessions. Which means that requests would intermittently fail auth because the session was only on one replica. If you hit any of the other ones, you’d get an unauthenticated error
- A metrics collection system that silently lost 90% of it’s data
- Constant outages due to poorly designed and implemented systems (and lack of metrics… hmmm)
- Everything when I joined was a single gigantic monolith that was so poorly implemented they had to run at least 3 different versions of it in different modes to serve different use cases (why the fuck did you make it a monolith then?!)
- The subscriptions system was something like 20 or 30 database tables. And they were polymorphic. No one could touch the system without it breaking or that person declaring failure, which leads me to …
- A database schema with over 350 tables, many of which were join tables that should have been on the original table (fuck you scala/java for the limitations to the number of fields you can have in a case class). Yes you read that right. Table A joined to table B just to fill in some extra data that was 1:1 with table A. Repeat that a few dozen times
- History tables. Not separate from the original table, but a table that contained the entire history of a given piece of data. The worst example was with those extraneous join tables I just mentioned. If you went and changed a toggle from true to false to true to false, you’d have 4 records in the same table. One for each of those small changes. You’d have to constantly try to figure out what the ‘latest’ version of the data was. Now try joining 5 tables together, all of them in this pattern.
- Scala… I could go on a tirade about how bad scala is but needless to say, how many different error handling mechanisms are there? Scala decided to mix all of them together in a blender and use them all together. Scala is just two white paper languages in a trenchcoat. Never use it in a production system
- A dashboard for “specialists” that was so easy to overwhelm that you could do it by breathing on it due to the LACK of events that it needed
- Passwords stored in plain text (admittedly this was in the systems of the company we acquired while I was there). Doesn’t matter if they were actually <insert algorithm here>, they were visible in a dashboard accessible by employees. Might as well have been plain text
- A payments system that leaked it’s state into a huge part of the rest of the system. The system ended up being bifurcated across two systems, I was brought in to try to clean up some of the mess after only a couple of months. I desperately tried to get some help because I couldn’t do it solo. They ended up giving me the worst engineer I’ve ever worked with in my 15 year career, and I’ve seen some bad engineers. Looking back, I’m reasonably confident he was shoving our codebase into an AI system (before it was approved/secured, so who knows who had access) and not capable of making changes himself. I could make several posts about this system on its own
- I could go on but I’ll cut it off there
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
News@lemmy.world•Homeschooling Hits Record NumbersEnglish
201·2 months agoI don’t have a definitive answer for this but I suspect the answer is “it depends”. My brother homeschooled for a number of years because he was very bright scholastically and it worked better for him. I tried it for a year but it didn’t work nearly as well so I went back to regular school.
All that being said, homeschooling can and is used by some hyper religious parents which can have pretty bad consequences for the children.
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
News@lemmy.world•Judge dismisses charges against 2 people accused of ramming vehicle of federal agents conducting Chicago immigration sweepsEnglish
45·2 months agoDuring a Nov. 5 court hearing, CBP Agent Charles Exum, identified as the agent who shot Martinez, was questioned by Parente about text messages he sent to friends and family after the incident in which he appeared to boast about his shooting skills.
"I fired 5 rounds and she had 7 holes. Put that in your book, boys,” one of those messages said.
What a psycho
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft says Copilot will 'finish your code before you finish your coffee' adding fuel to the Windows 11 AI controversy that's still ragingEnglish
11·2 months agoThe circlejerk of tech bros and busidiots who haven’t built a damn thing in their lives.
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•Katie Wilson Wins Seattle Mayor’s Race After Insurgent Campaign Demanding AffordabilityEnglish
1·3 months ago“Insurgent”?
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
News@lemmy.world•US announces ‘Southern Spear’ mission as forces deploy near South AmericaEnglish
19·3 months agoNothing like an unprovoked war to distract from the Epstein files
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•The White House thought the shutdown would be quick. Now they’re frustrated.English
32·3 months ago“frustrated”?! People are literally starving because of their greed, their ego, their complete lack of empathy
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Amazon Allegedly Replaced 40% of AWS DevOps With AI Days Before CrashEnglish
9·3 months agoMBAs are mortal enemies of software engineers. Couple that with what one former CEO of mine said: “engineers have very well tuned bullshit detectors” and you arrive at the problem…
halloween_spookster@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•Judge’s $1.5m home destroyed in huge fire as her family is rushed to hospitalEnglish
9·4 months agoIn America, we can only seem to relate to each other by buying stuff. The monetary value of a thing is close enough
It’s just a bottle of whiskey
Similar story to a lot of others here
Around a year ago I got fed up with Microsoft forcefully pushing unwanted and privacy-invading “features” on their users. It scared me to continue using it. I wanted more control and more protection for my privacy. So I decided to install Mint.
I’ve dabbled with Linux in the past and use it extensively in my job, but hadn’t switched significantly to it in the past. One of the biggest blockers being games. I bought a Steam Deck a couple of years ago so I was needing increasingly confident that Linux would work for gaming to some extent. It ended up working very smoothly and I haven’t looked back.
I still have my dual boot, partially because I haven’t bothered to remove windows fully. At this point there’s very little reason for me to not into windows. I’ve only encountered one game I’ve wanted to play that didn’t work in Linux and that was an old game with mods. I might be able to get it working if I really troubleshooted it, but it’s not that important.


Does it happen at a consistent time or frequency? Like at 8pm or after 2 hours of being turned on?