

So thankful my dad isn’t like this
I believe they were burned, since we have blanks laying around. The data was migrated from tape I think.
I’ll have to look into compatibility. I happen to have an internal Dell DVD-RW reader, but I think it was made after 2010.
that was something I tried, to no avail. I used a clean lens cleaner with a dab of distilled water. I am only assuming at this point that the drive is scratched, but to my eyes there is nothing wrong with the CD. They are just maybe a decade old at this point and my cousins want a copy of the data which I intend to send them by ripping the existing CDs.
I would guess yast, merlyn, zypper, no rpm fusion (?), but you get OPI, good security defaults like apparmor and ufw (which messes with printers). I like it so far. I’ve found most packages im looking for and it hasn’t broken on me once during an upgrade. Zypper also recently got a big speed buff that I’m aware of.
Opensuse tumbleweed if you want stability, rpm packages, and bleeding edge. They also have a fantastic KDE edition.
This is not the same Tyler Robinson that is in custody for the shooting of Charlie Kirk. Property records and addresses show the donor residing at a different address than the shooter. The shooter never donated to Trump or any other presidential candidate.
and then everyone clapped
I don’t believe Debian is susceptible to worms — it wasn’t even susceptible to last year’s xz attack — and if you have a network firewall with port forwarding disabled, there is no way in unless your router’s firmware is compromised. If you’re running any community driven software like, for example, game plugins for servers you’re hosting, those could be suspect. Anything not FOSS is also a suspect. Otherwise, if you’ve already done a secure wipe (using dd, hdparm/nvme, or your UEFI) and used another motherboard then it probably isn’t your firmware that is compromised. You mentioned SSH and credential reuse, so this leads me to think a device on your network, like an IoT device (thermometer, baby monitor, home assistant, Roku, etc.) could be infected with malware. You really can’t trust these things to have any security whatsoever and they need to be placed on a segmented or guest network. This attack honestly seems very immature, something a script kiddie would do, or perhaps it is automated. On that note, automation loves vulnerabilities, so if you forgot to change the default credential on your router for example, I would fix that. Make sure everything is on the latest version and patch everything. I would also start suspecting neighbors and juvenile kids around high school age. If nothing else works then I would do a full Mr. Robot wipe down ;)
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i just accept that i can’t say what I want to say and forget about it
wow yeah this article is a load of bullshit. A steaming pile of journalism. Actually a bit of an insult.
My “IT” employer is still using hardware from 2017-2018 and we have maybe a handful of actual desktop PCs. This Windows 11 thing is kind of hilarious since we are totally unprepared financially.
This is probably the #1 reason I started using qbit and now use it in my homelab’s docker container.
1337x.to was blocked for me today! Even though it doesn’t stream content. Feels like an “enshittification pincer” is happening right now.
I came here because I was permabanned from all os Reddit because I wrote an elevator lie about. A fictitious lie about a cheese man roaming the campus late at night
Edit:I’m sorry I can’t make this coherent I’m knocked badly
I like flatpaks, kinda. If something is in the standard repo, I install it. If it’s a library or CLI tool, I add the repository. If it has simple build instructions, I build it. If all of those things are too complicated or they want me to run a script, I just install the flatpak.