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floatingatoll

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floatingatoll
·geçen ay·discuss
Years and years ago, I took a photo set of the Santa Cruz boardwalk and all of its beautifully painted buildings and rides, in the middle of January when it was completely and utterly devoid of people. I think I encountered one person the entire visit. I was thrilled because it let me add a second album to my collection of “places that are gorgeous and deserve photographs taken of them without all those annoying people in the way”, and I celebrated the reactions from people. Which were, more or less, that is was incredibly weird to see it portrayed in perfectly normal lighting and color and tone, but missing the one thing that everyone takes for granted: passersby.

Anyways, I reawoke this old dead account (I have since changed names everywhere, here too) so I can link the album and talk about it. Not because I care about appreciation of my photos, but because as an early adopter of the trend, I found it was possible to create the eeriness of today’s ’liminal spaces’ without the ‘lifeless’ characteristics of the Backrooms, House of Leaves, an so on. It’s a lot easier to create that feeling with decay, with monotonality, with cookie-cutter cubicle mazes; and, the theory tends to connect with people more readily as plausible if you include ‘rotted by time and age’ to justify the emptiness as Horizon Zero Dawn and Last of Is both lovingly demonstrated.

But at the core of all of this modern liminal, is portraying human-dense spaces as human-zero, and then confronting the eternal question that haunts humanity: “What happens in the dark forest when no humans are observing?” Whether it’s a cubicle maze or a carnival ride, as the world grows more and more crowded and lonely, it’s no wonder that we want to spy on our busiest spaces after we’ve all gone home for the day. What do they get up to? Where did all the people go? Is this merely a painting of a screaming person on a wall, or is this space empty because they were consumed?

https://www.flickr.com/photos/floatingatoll/albums/721576328...
floatingatoll
·5 yıl önce·discuss
Range requests are the star, so I would vote keep them? I mean, technically, the CDN could represent each 4kb block of the file as an individual URL, so that you do range requests by filename instead of by .. range request .. but at some point I definitely think RRs are more sane.
floatingatoll
·5 yıl önce·discuss
TIL, for whatever it's worth :) Thanks!
floatingatoll
·5 yıl önce·discuss
It's a static file, CDN it.
floatingatoll
·5 yıl önce·discuss
To add the unstated testimony: I have two Eeros connected to an 8-port switch and they handle it just fine.
floatingatoll
·5 yıl önce·discuss
I used to do all of those things on homebuilt FreeBSD routers for a commercial ISP we built and ran for a few years back in the day, and now I do them on my off-the-shelf router so that I don’t have to maintain the OS or link-shaping, I just click Update Now once in a while and it autoadapts to local congestion.

All of these features are available out of the box and have a GUI intelligent enough to offer a text area for adding filtering/rewriting commands that exceed the GUI’s remit. I used to have to hand-build this. Now I can plug and play it, and end up with the same experience as someone who built their own server and OS, using the same open source components as they would.

Total time invested, 8 hours over 5 years. I’m content with that exchange, and it has come with the only drawback being “it cost money to purchase the router itself”. I could DIY for less expensive in dollars and more expensive in hours. That’s the hobby-or-not choice, as I see it.

I do not decry those who invest time instead. Good, do so! I invested thousands of hours of my life into DIY of this stuff. It was invaluable experience, but it’s no longer mandatory to DIY to get a great experience indistinguishable from DIY.
floatingatoll
·5 yıl önce·discuss
As a former enthusiast in this area, I need the time for other more pressing interests and have reverted my home network to Eeros pinned to an IQrouter. All of them require some central service to operate, and I rarely if ever have to pay any attention to them. They also provide better coverage and less radio interference than the prior gold standard, Apple Airport devices. The IQ runs some sort of ssh *nix variant and the only time I’ve ever had to call Eero support was to turn off 5GHz for a minute^ to pair a smarthome device.

Still, it’s nice to have a hobby, and if you’re looking for one, run your own, sure! No shame in that. But it’s no longer necessary, and that’s pretty swell to me.

^ I agree with why they don’t make that accessible to end users: because people will uselessly fiddle with settings knobs to feel empowered, knobs like “separate 2.4 and 5 networks” (which breaks roaming and makes users incorrectly blame their WiFi routers when PEBCAK is at fault) that semi-expert users feel qualified to mess with, and lazy technicians will use to create “guest” networks that don’t offer protection and perform miserably due to being locked to 5GHz.
floatingatoll
·5 yıl önce·discuss
Yeah, Dejanews was the harbinger of the archiving apocalypse. I added X-No-Archive: Yes to have dejanews throw away my posts the instant I learned about it, and then later on when Google bought dejanews and gave us all a one-time "opt out or be archived forever" chance, I was able to purge all the rest.
floatingatoll
·6 yıl önce·discuss
What if running certain apps or heavy loads did not shorten the laptop's battery life from 8-10 hours?

Is an Apple processor chip able to provide more results in macOS creative apps (GarageBand, Logic, etc.) per watt-hour than any Intel chip? If so, then Apple will target Pro users with the A14, because it'll reduce demand on the battery in Pro scenarios. Either they'll reduce the weight of the laptop, and/or trade battery volume for other purposes, and/or increase the advertised battery life of the laptop.

An iMac Pro is just a MacBook Pro glued to the back of a much larger monitor and a higher thermal cap. So if they would do it for MacBook Pro, they would do it for iMac Pro. And that means that the iMac Pro, which has a fixed amount of thermal capacity, would make more efficient use of the heat it generates.

x% more efficient use of a battery on a laptop translates to y% improvement of some other aspect of a laptop and a desktop, and Apple isn't historically afraid of adding a new macOS architecture when improvements require it.
floatingatoll
·6 yıl önce·discuss
I don’t appreciate your link to a third-party reader here, because you’re implying that the contradiction of HN’s style guidelines (code formatting is for code) is somehow made acceptable by the existence of an app that reformats it for only a few readers.

If I switch to an app rather than ask the person to stop, the other HN mobile users who use a browser rather than app will continue to suffer. ”Use an app” is not an acceptable choice.
floatingatoll
·6 yıl önce·discuss
Can Chrome extensions on the new proposed v3 standard remove that outbound request header?
floatingatoll
·6 yıl önce·discuss
No worries :)
floatingatoll
·6 yıl önce·discuss
This comment is unreadable on mobile. https://i.imgur.com/jFusqw0.png

Could you please remove the four-space indent? You can wrap each paragraph in * ... * if you want to italic them.
floatingatoll
·7 yıl önce·discuss
It's on GitHub in case you'd like to answer that question by source inspection. I'm not familiar with Android so I can't do so for you, sorry:

https://mtransitapps.github.io/
floatingatoll
·7 yıl önce·discuss
Does the time until oomkiller change dramatically on spinning metal versus SATA SSD versus NVMe, in a swap-off scenario?
floatingatoll
·7 yıl önce·discuss
Protected classes are subject to rules prohibiting the expression of hate speech, even if they claim protection for their hate speech.
floatingatoll
·7 yıl önce·discuss
Archive.is does not appear to specify in detail what operational issues result from the missing client subnet EDNS data. We can speculate, though. Is it for data harvesting purposes, or for global load balancing concerns? Are users complaining due to some unknown side effect? Are localized in-country-firewall servers receiving traffic from out-country clients?
floatingatoll
·7 yıl önce·discuss
Text of tweet by @archiveis:

"Having to do" is not so direct here. Absence of EDNS and massive mismatch (not only on AS/Country, but even on the continent level) of where DNS and related HTTP requests come from causes so many troubles so I consider EDNS-less requests from Cloudflare as invalid.
floatingatoll
·7 yıl önce·discuss
In response to that "unfixed" issue, they noted - in a timely manner, last year - that archive.is is returning bad IPs to them, which is preventing them from serving good IPs:

https://community.cloudflare.com/t/archive-is-error-1001/182...

> Nameservers responsible for archive.is (ben.archive.is, anna.archive.is) are returning answers tailored to the IP address of the requestor.

And indicate that anyone who knows how to contact archive.is can ask them to resolve the issue:

> If you have a contact on the domain owner, you can ask them to fix this.

EDIT: This is knowingly blocked by archive.is. Reasoning and discussion elsewhere in post comments. No need to contact archive.is about it, they’re clearly aware.
floatingatoll
·8 yıl önce·discuss
The login dialog for the Itch.io desktop client is magically excluded from the accessible canvas on my OS X instance.