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zerof1l
Joined 743 karma

  1. To me, the biggest appeal of the Framework laptop is that I can repair it myself and buy OEM parts directly.

    I currently own a Lenovo Legion laptop. Still, a very powerful machine, but the screen now has a spot in the middle with multiple dead pixels, the topcoat on the trackpad is peeling off, and the main body has spots where palms rest. I'd happily buy replacement parts and install them, but I can't.

  2. I wonder how much variation there is between a person who does certain mental activity regularly vs a person who rarely does it.

    If they were to measure a person who performs mental arithmetic on a daily basis, I'd expect his brain activity and oxygen consumption to be lower than those of a person who never does it. How much difference would that make?

  3. I don't understand why people willingly pay thousands for these fridges. Just buy a regular fridge without the screen.
  4. It's possible to gauge where the election is going; you don't need to see the votes. With social profiling, and people talking in general...
  5. Don't know why your comment is downvoted so much.

    Even if this was an accident, isn't it theoretically possible for one of the trustees to intentionally not provide the key to trigger the re-election? There's no guarantee that the people will vote the same. I see this as a kind of vulnerability.

  6. Can't find RAM and CPU specs for RTL8372N. Would be interesting to flash OpenWRT onto it.
  7. I'm curious how they plan to enforce it lol, because I don't think they can. Unless they plan to build something similar to the Great Firewall of China. But it will have to be nationwide. I don't think one state can do it.
  8. As a LibreChat user, I'm concerned. I've seen open source projects get acquired like that, and very soon they start to have some kind of paid features, telemetry, etc. Might have to start looking for alternatives soon.
  9. Did it occur to anyone that stocks and stock-derived products like ETFs and indexes are driven by emotions rather than financials? The company sells its stocks once, typically, and from that moment on, stocks live their own life of speculation by people who mostly have no say in the company. A company might be doing perfectly well, but the stock would fall because some people "think" that the company is doing badly. But if nobody were to act, nothing would happen to the stock. Similarly, people can just decide that a Stock is worth something out of nowhere - GameStop stock.

    Essentially, predicting stock movement becomes predicting the sentiment of the people. Instead of "the financial report means the company is doing X", it becomes "if people were to see this financial report, they would react by X".

    And this whole thing feels like a big Ponzi scheme. Everyone keeps repeating that you need to invest your money, and that's what essentially makes the market long-term bullish.

  10. I'm self-hosting Obsidian sync. I mostly followed the tutorial here: https://www.reddit.com/r/selfhosted/comments/1eo7knj/guide_o...

    Except I wanted more security and multiple users. Instead of using the default admin user, I created one user for each person. Done in the "_users" database. Then create one database for each person. Assign each user as a "Member" to their respective database, not admin. Now each person has their own credentials that can access only their database.

  11. I've been using Nextcloud now for 4+ years. The latest major versions pretty much have no features that benefit regular home users. They are now chasing government contracts and AI hype.

    Nextcloud can't even get Notes done right. I lost the entire contents of the note randomly not long ago. And the mobile Note app refuses to load the editor sometimes.

    That being said, most of the time, Nextcloud works ok. I don't want to replace Nextcloud with another jack of all trades, master of none. Instead, I'm slowly migrating to good alternatives that do one thing well: Immich for photos, Obsidian for notes.

  12. > ... renting hundreds of thousands of infected Internet of Things (IoT) devices to proxy services...

    And that's why I will never buy any IoT devices that require an internet connection to work. Only IoT devices in my house are those that connect to my own server and never see the light of the internet.

  13. I believe that Jellyfin, Immish, and NextCloud login pages are automatically flagged as dangerous by Google. What's more, I suspect that Google is somehow collecting data from its browser - Chrome.

    Google flagged my domain as dangerous once. I do host Jellyfin, Immish, and NextCloud. I run an IP whitelist on the router. All packets from IPs that are not whitelisted are dropped. There are no links to my domain on the internet. At any time, there are 2-3 IPs belonging to me and my family that can load the website. I never whitelisted Google IPs.

    How on earth did Google manage to determine that my domain is dangerous?

  14. No joke, I only plug my printer into the outlet when I want to print and immediately turn it off after. Never was connected to the internet.

    But I do have Zigbee sensors and switches, all of which connect to my home server and Home Assistant. None of them see the internet. But Home Assistant is accessible from the internet through a reverse proxy from whitelisted IPs.

  15. GrapheneOS user here. Every single banking and financial app I use works. Both European ones and non-European. Some require changing per-app settings, but nothing crazy. There's a good chance that your banking app will work.

    https://github.com/PrivSec-dev/banking-apps-compat-report

    https://privsec.dev/posts/android/banking-applications-compa...

  16. How do these articles keep getting to the front of HN...

    > The certificates provide no security: The way you verify your identity to Let's Encrypt... you place a file somewhere on your website, and they access > Automatic renewal is insecure: certbot ... downloads a bunch of untrusted data from the web, and then feeds that data into your web server, all as root...

    False, this is NOT the only way. You can do it by setting a TXT DNS record. No files involved. Your server communicates with the registrar through API over an encrypted connection.

    > Manual renewal isn't free...

    You're not supposed to manually review Let's Encrypt in the first place. The whole point is that you set up cron job once and forget about it.

    > HTTPS is a trap: Once you've moved your websites to HTTPS, there's no going back to plain HTTP...

    Not true. You can run HTTP version of your website in parallel if you so desire.

    > Let's Encrypt is founded on the benevolence of scoundrels: Let's Encrypt isn't free to run, either. Their 2019 operating budget is 3.6 million U.S. dollars. Most of that is donated by… guess who? _Your competitors_[1].

    EFF and Mozilla foundation are not my competitors LOL.

    [1] https://www.abetterinternet.org/sponsors/

    >It's bad engineering: When you install a certificate with a three-month expiration...

    https://letsencrypt.org/2015/11/09/why-90-days

    https://letsencrypt.org/2025/01/16/6-day-and-ip-certs

  17. Germany desperately needs a wake-up call in the form of recession. German car industry has been non-competitive for multiple years now. Instead of letting it fail, the government kept on flushing money down the toilet and prolonging the inevitable.

    For a business, there's no incentive anymore to choose Germany over other EU countries. Cheap energy is gone. Germany is literally collapsing under its own weight: endless bureaucratic structures that just keep on growing.

  18. Very US-centric article. Written by insecure people who are clinging to power and money desperately.

    I don't see how some kind of big breakthrough is going to happen with the current model designs. The superintelligence, if it will ever be created, will require a new breakthrough in model architecture. We've pretty much hit the limit of what is possible with current LLMs. The improvements are marginal at this point.

    Secondly, hypothetically, the US achieves superintelligence, what is stopping China from doing the same in a month or two, for example?

    Even if China achieves a big breakthrough first, it may benefit the rest of the world.

  19. > This case shows how, even when Apple tightly controls its repair infrastructure, it cannot prevent disastrous cases like this

    Customers should be able to choose where to repair their device, or even be able to repair it themselves. Just because it's an "official" repair shop doesn't mean its the best and the safest. Louis Rossmann has been saying this for years.

  20. I personally know a woman from Iran. She has a PhD in Data Science. She works and lives in the EU. Her mindset is that of an educated European person.

    She does not support the current Iranian government, and neither do most of the people in Iran, according to her. But publicly expressing disagreement in Iran could have you disappear. That's why people are afraid to protest and speak out.

    Regarding sanctions, it's not that hard to find and buy products from Iran. At least in the EU. What happens is neighboring countries import raw material from Iran, then put a label "Made in Pakistan", for example, and sell it. But those who know, can easily find and buy things like Iranian rice and spices.

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