sloppy_diffuser

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 16 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Not a huge fan of this. I distinctly do not want:

  • To be tied to Proton if they really fuck up. I use my own domains that are portable. I use Proton Pass aliases for throw away accounts I could go without.
  • To not be able to secure my accounts with separate emails/usernames and long distinct passwords (or better yet passkeys) for each service. I don't use Proton Pass for password management.
  • To provide data points linking my online activities by not using separate emails/usernames.
[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

I haven't made a keyboard in awhile but anything that supports QMK (or whatever is new and shiny today) should be able to support this.

QMK and the like are custom firmware so you can pretty much code up whatever feature you need.

If you are looking for a pre-built, I know my Tofu65 supports QMK from https://kbdfans.com/.

QMK is written in C but they do have a no code tool I used for my Tofu65: https://config.qmk.fm/#/.

If the tool doesn't cover your use case and you are able to do a little C, these sections are good starting points for layers (what you call modes) and cursor keys.

https://docs.qmk.fm/feature_layers

https://docs.qmk.fm/features/mouse_keys

[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (2 children)

My work laptop is a Dell Precision. It was a "data science" model that came with Ubuntu. Wiped Dell's modified Ubuntu and put vanilla Ubuntu on it and now running Nixos. Works great. There was a weird period when using triple monitors with their dock had an intermittent issue on boot where resolutions and monitors were not being detected. Cause was Nvidia drivers. It eventually got resolved and it was easy enough to rollback the drivers to one that worked.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago
  1. Install nix.
  2. nix profile install nixpkgs#vscodium
  3. nix profile upgrade '.*'

Won't auto update but you could add the upgrade command to a login script or something.

Won't lie, nix has a high learning curve to get the most out of it, but installing a single app is pretty simple.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 weeks ago

It was really good. Seeing Logan and Loki (series) would help follow the plot some if you haven't seen either but I didn't feel it was hard requirement. There are throwbacks to past Fox superhero movies, but they didn't add critical plot points.

Lots of 4th wall breaking including ripping into Disney, Fox, and the post Endgame downward spiral of MCU.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 weeks ago

I open the conversation with "Jmp.chat bot" in Cheogram. That particular conversation has two tabs, conversation or commands. On the commands tab I have "Buy account credit by...".

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago

That is a good point, will have to check my benefits. Thanks!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

The one that didn't die right array was also a botched update. Never got the firmware over email (Hisense). Vizio, Sony, and Samsung were the ones that died right after warrenty.

I use an external media box so I don't update them anymore.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 3 weeks ago

Most startups I've applied to are Linux friendly.

I currently work for a fortune 100 and managed to get a Linux machine purchased as a "lab" machine.

I'm fully in control. IT doesn't even know it exists. I'm not allowed on the corporate network, but I managed to get some internal corporate access through another department's lab network (IT sanctioned) that has a VPN with a few routes to things like ticketing, time cards, and our internal wiki. Most of the stuff I need to do my job is in AWS and we are allowed to add home IPs to the security groups.

IT still gives me a MacBook. I use it like once every 6 months.

nixos-unstable is the only thing I will use currently.

I'm running bleeding edge stuff like the latest kernel, Hyprland nightly, my own "shell" built from Gnome components and lots of custom stuff using GJS (Gnome JavaScript).

If you get one, and you are free to do whatever on it, encrypt your drives like your job depends on it. I have a memorized passphrase, pin protected hardware key, and a key in TPM. No biometrics.

As far as other nice things to have:

  • VPN: https://www.infradead.org/openconnect/ supports some common enterprise VPNs.
  • Communication tools (Teams, WebEx, Zoom, Slack, etc.). I tend to have access to 90% of what I need. My team is thankfully accommodating for the couple features I have issues with. Make sure you test things like Screen Sharing especially in Wayland if you use it.
  • VM: If you can get a corporate licensed image to run a corporate licensed version of Office, I recommend it. Office365 for web is missing a few features and often renders differently from native.
  • Password Manager and encrypt everything. System is encrypted as previously stated. My home volume (BTRFS) is encrypted with a different key/passphrase. My work's sensitive files are encrypted yet again using rclone with different keys. I try to minimize attack surfaces by unlocking only what I need when I need it.
  • Backups. I use rclone to backup to our corporate OneDrive. Nixos is immutable and I have it setup with impermanence where every reboot is like a fresh install if I didn't codify it my nixos-config which is tracked in git. I persist a few cache and setting directories in my home directory, but not much. I can restore my setup in like 20 minutes if I ever lost my machine.
  • Virtual mic and camera for noise suppression and blurring for communication tools that don't have it built in.
  • Evolution EWS works okay as an Exchange email client. I had to hunt some weird settings like tenant ID to get it to work. I've been using Webmail or Outlook in a VM more often though as of late.

I work in software dev as FYI. For the few issues I have, my team has more issues getting stuff working consistently on macOS for our project. I used that as a justification when requesting the laptop: my dev environment should closely match our runtime environment. Most of that is moot now since we use Nix flakes in our repos for local dev envs.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 3 weeks ago (4 children)

They also don't last. I've bought 6 flat screens since 2006. 4 have died, all in the second year of ownership. 3 of those died on month 13, 1 month after the warranty. 1 of those died the day after the warranty expired...

I swear they plan for them to die right after warranty or I just have the worst luck. Doesn't matter if I spend $500 or $3000+ on name brand. I started saving money on the last two that died by insuring them. At this point I'm just leasing them until they die.

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