z3r0_Geek 1 month ago • 100%
I switched to KISS launcher after I knew the company had bought the project. Never came back.
https://github.com/rothgar/awesome-tuis
z3r0_Geek 3 months ago • 100%
Decipher #9
deciphered in ⏱️ 13m 31s
⭐⭐
https://decipher.wtf
It's harder if your mother language is not English
z3r0_Geek 3 months ago • 100%
🇫
Mazele 457 X/6
⬇️⬛️⬛️🟨🟨🟨⬛️
➡️🟩⬛️⬛️⬛️⬛️⬛️
⬇️⬛️⬛️⬛️🟨🟨⬛️
➡️⬛️⬛️⬛️⬛️⬛️⬛️
⬇️⬛️⬛️⬛️🟨🟨⬛️
➡️🟩⬛️⬛️⬛️🟨⬛️
⬇️⬛️⬛️🟩🟩🟩⬛️
➡️🟩⬛️⬛️⬛️🟨⬛️
⬇️⬛️⬛️⬛️🟩⬛️⬛️
➡️🟩⬛️⬛️⬛️⬛️⬛️
⬇️⬛️⬛️🟩🟩⬛️⬛️
➡️🟩🟨⬛️⬛️🟨⬛️
https://mazele.io/
``` I got Hexcodle #322 in 5! Score: 54% ⏫🔼⏫⏫⏫⏬ 🔽✅⏫⏫🔼🔼 ✅✅🔼🔽✅🔼 ✅✅🔼✅✅✅ ✅✅✅✅✅✅ https://hexcodle.com ```
z3r0_Geek 3 months ago • 100%
I didn't get Hexcodle #321 :( Score: 51%
⏫🔼⏫⏫⏫⏫
⏫✅⏫🔽🔽⏫
🔽✅⏫✅✅⏫
🔼✅⏫✅✅🔼
🔼✅✅✅✅🔼
https://hexcodle.com
Shame!
z3r0_Geek 3 months ago • 100%
I know someone that will find this interesting.
Thanks!
z3r0_Geek 3 months ago • 100%
Yep! And it can kill you in 1 or 2 hits if you aren't lookie.
The best strategy for dragons is to flee. Or you can fight them if you feel confident enough.
Task is a task runner / build tool that aims to be simpler and easier to use than, for example, GNU Make. Since it's written in Go, Task is just a single binary and has no other dependencies, which means you don't need to mess with any complicated install setups just to use a build tool. Once installed, you just need to describe your build tasks using a simple YAML schema in a file called `Taskfile.yml`
`https://www.dungleon.com #870 3/6🔸 🟩🟪🟪🟨🟪 🟩🟪🟩🟪🟩 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 38⚔️ 92👹 37🪙 racha: 16`
z3r0_Geek 3 months ago • 100%
He didn't fight the dragon. Wise movement. Flee today to be able to fight tomorrow
z3r0_Geek 3 months ago • 100%
I didn't get Hexcodle #320 :( Score: 52%
🔽⏫⏬⏫⏫⏫
✅🔼✅🔼⏫⏫
✅✅✅✅⏫⏫
✅✅✅✅⏫⏫
✅✅✅✅⏫⏫
https://hexcodle.com
z3r0_Geek 3 months ago • 100%
Nothing at all.
I see you were able to kill the dragon. Lucky guy!
``` #Rogule 2024-6-25 🧝 4xp ☠🐉 113 👣 streak: 0 ⬜⬜⬜⬜⬜ ⚔ 🐗👹 🌰⬜ 🍄🍄 https://rogule.com ```
z3r0_Geek 3 months ago • 100%
🧝 5xp ⛩ 169 👣
streak: 2
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
⚔ 🐗🦇👻🐗🐗
🌰🌰🌰🌰🌰
🍄🍄
And what if we reserve the best weapons for when there were not any monster left?
z3r0_Geek 3 months ago • 100%
I got Hexcodle #319 in 4! Score: 70%
⏫✅🔽⏬🔼⏫
✅✅✅🔽✅🔼
✅✅✅🔽✅✅
✅✅✅✅✅✅
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHTo__bpnlYVCQrOMsTYHIKSRXyXkJaww
Challenger Deep is an instrumental rock four-piece boy band out of Atlanta, Georgia. Born of a passion for music and a light-hearted camaraderie, they continue to push their creative limits to create music that is both technically interesting and fun to listen to. Drawing on different inspirations, the band’s members incorporate their individual styles cultivated over years of playing into the boundless possibilities that instrumental music has to offer.
z3r0_Geek 3 months ago • 100%
I'm trying Astral Chain
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/16588715 > Follow-up of a similar project I had done for BotW "back in the day" ;) > > What has changed in the locations from Zelda's pictures / the memory flashback scenes? I have 3 comparison pictures for each location, one from Zelda's time (the pictures on the Sheikah Slate), one from Link's time (gameplay in BotW) and one from the time of the Upheaval (TotK) > > For the BotW version, I was able to more or less recreate the pics in a recognizable manner including the right weather conditions and time of day/night so that the shadows align in the same way, but this was sadly no longer possible in TotK as the devs flipped the sun's path. In BotW, it goes East - North - West while in TotK it goes East - South - West instead. > > During any of the daytime pictures, the shadows will point in the opposite direction as in the original pictures. There is no longer an overlap where the shadows would be perfectly identical. > > ![](https://up.picr.de/48046854fa.png) > > (original compass credit: wikimedia commons, JamesLucas[^1] and edited by myself) > [^1]: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Compass-rose-32-pt.svg > > With that being said, some locations still haven't changed at all, especially the ones with pictures that were taken at night (so the shadows don't matter anway). > > **For bigger pictures, open them in a new tab/window:** > > --- > > ### 1. Sacred Grounds / Lookout Landing > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772841ai.png) > > ...this however is a location that has changed *drastically*. While in BotW, the only noticable changes were the broken pillars and the ominously gloomy castle in the background, the place is barely recognizable in TotK. If it hadn't been for the pillars and the Triforce emblem, there wouldn't have been similarities. The castle is hovering now, the forest is gone, buildings have appeared and even the name itself has changed, from "Sacred Grounds" to "Lookout Landing". > > --- > > ### 2. Lake Kolomo > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772842zs.png) > > The ruins of the garrison are identical in all pictures - noone tried to rebuild the garrison, but it didn't fall apart further either. If you know what kind of creature lurks there in TotK, you might know WHY they didn't send any builders there ... or maybe they did, and the builders just never returned. > > And yes, that is a Korok puzzle rock. > > --- > > ### 3. Ancient Columns > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772843bd.png) > > The differences are solely background items here. and the shadows of course, as mentioned in the intro text. Notable changes between Zelda's and Link's picture are the Sheikah Tower (not present in Zelda's time) and the fact that the shrine is now in standby mode instead of turned off (no glow VS orange glow). > > In TotK then, both of them are gone completely and so is Vah Medoh. The perpetual thunderstorm in Hebra will be there until you've cleared the Rito questline. > > Other than that, there are floating islands now, but you can say that about almost all pictures here anyway ;) > > --- > > ### 4. Kara Kara Bazaar > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772844lt.png) > > Basically no changes at all between Zelda's and Link's picture. In the Upheaval time tho, the water levels in the oasis are noticably lower than before and the barricades and structure atop the arrow shop stick out like a sore thumb. At least the water levels go back to normal after clearing the Gerudo questline, but the other changes are here to stay. > > And like the Lake Kolomo picture, the palm trees are also still completely identical. No offshoots grew, no old tree withered, nothing. From a meta perspective it makes sense to not change too much (the pictures have to be easily recognizable and TBH it is a lot of work to change plant growth instead of just copypasting the area) but from an in-game perspective it is just plain weird to see that these things haven't changed at all in a whole century. > > --- > > ### 5. Eldin Canyon > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772846ja.png) > > The murky thing down there is the Military Training Ground. In Zelda's time there seems to have been clear water (the sun reflects in it) while in Link's time it was already a muddy mess (no reflection) and in the Upheaval it got worse (now the Lost Woods are dark and murky too). > > I couldn't get the heigth right for this pic as it is very hard to build a sufficiently high tower of crates with Magnesis alone, and even harder to then actually climb it without it toppling over for the umpteenth time, but since TotK has Ultrahand, Hoverstones, Ascend and the ability to bring your own platforms to stand on via Autobuild (or just more Zonai devices), this problem was a lot easier to solve in the sequel. > > --- > > ### 6. Irch Plain > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772850qg.png) > > In-game, the picture and location are just called "Hyrule Field" despite not being in Central Hyrule and having an actual name on the in-game map. I am unsure whether this is an oversight or the devs might have wanted to not make the location too obvious by spoiling its name. > > Again, there is no plant growth, the tree and the bush are the same ... and the lack of little flowers in "my" pictures is due to the fact that I had to mow a part of the meadow because the camera angle is so low to the ground that you'd otherwise just see the grass and not much else, like you're lying face-down in a field. > > --- > > ### 7. West Necluda > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772851vj.png) > > This tree is just a bit west of the Deya Village ruins, atop the hill. And again, the tree didn't grow or wither at all within the last century. The bridge is also still in the same state of disrepair, but this time, there is an understandable in-game reason for it: during Link's time, there were barely any Hylians left save for a handful of villages, and repairing something as huge as this bridge requires a LOT of workers, tools and materials. Someone has to chisel big enough stones for the missing parts, transport them through a Guardian-infested Hyrule to the bridge, set them into the right place, all with the added logistics of feeding and housing the workers while they're in the area and having to build, operate and maintain a big enough crane ... not exactly a top priority when there are barely enough villagers to work the fields. > > In TotK the population might be bigger and with the availiable Zonai devices, moving huge stone slabs around wouldn't be that big of an issue, but now there is this three-headed jerk camping smack in the middle of the bridge, and noone wants to go chase it off when all they have is pitchforks and rusty halberds. > > I also took the liberty of taking a pic during good weather conditions ... in Zelda's picture it was raining, and I tried to recreate that weather effect in BotW, but you can barely see any details then, so whatever. > > --- > > ### 8. Hyrule Castle > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772852xa.png) > > Since the weird permanent malice effect from BotW is gone now, the area looks a little closer to Zelda's time, tho the castle walls are still broken as noone had rebuild anything here yet. And there are still monsters, malice/gloom particles floating around and debris scattered everywhere. > > Not much has changed about this place, apart from the fact that the entire castle is now floating, but you can't really make that out that from this picture alone. > > --- > > ### 9. Spring of Power > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772853sa.png) > > Basically no changes at all, at least regarding the landscape. The only differences are that, in Zelda's pic, nothing is glowing, while in Link's picture both the statue of the Goddess and the memory location spot are shining brightly, and in TotK the memory spot is gone but the statue is still enveloped in light. > > --- > > ### 10. Sanidin Park Ruins > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772854rm.png) > > Despite looking pretty clean and well-maintained, this area has been called "ruins" from the very beginning for whatever reason. The second picture has a noticably different camera angle because I simply wasn't able to reach the correct spot for the picture, as this would have required Link to float twenty feet up in the air six feet behind the parapet, and good luck trying to get there when all you have is Magnesis and a couple seconds of Stasis. > > In TotK, this was lo longer a problem thanks to the various new features offering more mobility, so the third pic has the "right" camera angle again. Apart from that, barely anything has changed here. > > --- > > ### 11. Lanayru Road East Gate > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772855ey.png) > > No visible changes between the first and second picture, but that's because I hadn't freed Naydra yet. Comlpeting that quest removes the huge cloud from the mountaintop permanently, which is likely the reason it is just gone in TotK as Naydra is "clean" right from the start then. > > There's also now a Skyview Tower up there that the player would otherwise not have been able to see properly, which is a tad inconvenient when those towers are the only things that can unlock the map. > > --- > > ### 12. Nameless Forest > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772856ih.png) > > It really doesn't have a name, whether on the picture itself (it's just called Central Hyrule) nor on the in-game map, which is a tad weird when you consider that this forest has the last and most important memory location in it. There are also a lot of noticably smaller, way less important places that do have names (like every single bridge even if it is just 5 feet long and smack in the middle of nowhere) and the forest isn't exactly small either. > > As for actual changes here .... none. None at all. Even the dang ferns are still in the same spots and each individual leaf is still in the exact same place as 100+ years prior. The only unique thing here is the glowing memory location spot, but that disappears from BotW once you interacted with it, and it isn't present in TotK in the first place. > > --- > > ### 13. Ash Swamp > > ![](https://up.picr.de/47772857fo.png) > > The first isn't an actual picture but instead a painting hanging in Impa's abode in Kakariko. I guess she asked a painter (Pikango,maybe?) to create that picture way after Link was already put into the Shrine of Resurrection, but before he awoke - because the dead Guardians are already present and look like they have been sitting in that field for quite some time (overgrown with moss), but the Sheikah Tower isn't in the painting yet and that only appears once Link activated the "main tower" on the Great Plateau. > > It was rather hard to find the correct spot in TotK again, because all of the Guardians are gone and the background / other topography here looks incredibly generic and insignificant. Just another meadow with some broken pillars on it ... but to be fair, this place no longer holds any significance in TotK anyway, so there was probably no reason to make it stand out from the rest. > > --- > > If you have questions, requests, anything to point out / add or you spotted a mistake, please let me know ;) If you're interested in a video version with a little more backgound info, you can find it [here](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXfxFB6iydU).
https://evrecords.bandcamp.com/album/wet-cactus-magma-tres
z3r0_Geek 6 months ago • 100%
I'm using Librewolf (a Firefox fork) and have the same issue.
Just check Firefox messaging folder exists in your home
ls -l ~/.mozilla/native-messaging-hosts
In my case, I needed to create a symlink to make it work with my browser
ln -s ~/.mozilla/native-messaging-hosts ~/.librewolf/native-messaging-hosts
Maybe you could apply a similar workaround. Hope this helps
z3r0_Geek 7 months ago • 100%
Just joking. take it easy.
I mean, the person who filed that complaint must not be very well if feels annoyed by an apology note.
z3r0_Geek 7 months ago • 50%
Maybe who complained for the apology note prefers a good shotgun to solve his/her neighborhood matters
z3r0_Geek 7 months ago • 100%
I understand your point. Anyway, if your devs are using Helm they can still use Sops with the helm-secrets plugin. Just create a separated values file (can be named as secrets.yaml) contaning all sensitive values and encrypt it with Sops.
z3r0_Geek 7 months ago • 50%
This is the perfect situation in which consumers could just stop buying audiobooks from them and the problem would be solved, but noooo. Most people will prefer living with this shit because they cannot stop using Spotify. Great! I love humanity's awesome hability to consume crap from everyhere and everyone and still be grateful for that
z3r0_Geek 7 months ago • 94%
Great! I can't wait some assholes telling that this is progress and if you don't like it go fuck yourself
z3r0_Geek 7 months ago • 100%
What do you think about storing your encrypted secrets in your repos using Sops?
z3r0_Geek 7 months ago • 100%
For me is Final Fantasy IX. You can think the story is quite naive at the first gameplay, but on later replays I noticed that some characters have a deepest plot than I though the first time. I cannot tell much more without spoilers
z3r0_Geek 10 months ago • 100%
As long as they are not human teeth, everything will be fine
z3r0_Geek 10 months ago • 60%
Glad to know that Netflix renews something from time to time. Keep going and I might consider subscribing again
z3r0_Geek 11 months ago • 100%
You assumed well. I'm in a Firefish instance and the most content I can see from there comes from Mastodon users from other instances.
Don't missunderstand me. I think that is pretty cool because you can interact with both Mastodon and Firefish users using any of the two applications, but at least in case of my Firefish instance, most of the additional features of Firefish are underutilized.
z3r0_Geek 11 months ago • 100%
Thanks for your answer. That's correct as much as I can see in the EKS docs. But in GKE there is a little disclaimer here
If you want to use a beta Kubernetes feature in GKE, assume that the feature is enabled. Test the feature on your specific GKE control plane version. In some cases, GKE might disable a beta feature in a specific control plane version.
They basically say "ok, trust on all the beta features would be enabled by default, but we can disable some of them without advising you". Funny guys.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/3942293 > We need to deploy a Kubernetes cluster at v1.27. We need that version because it comes with a particular feature gate that we need and it was moved to beta and set enabled by default from that version. > > Is there any way to check which feature gates are enabled/disabled in a particular GKE and EKS cluster version without having to check the kubelet configuration inside a deployed cluster node? I don't want to deploy a cluster just to check this. > > I've check both GKE and EKS changelogs and docs, but I couldn't see a list of enabled/disabled feature gates list. > > Thanks in advance!
We need to deploy a Kubernetes cluster at v1.27. We need that version because it comes with a particular feature gate that we need and it was moved to beta and set enabled by default from that version. Is there any way to check which feature gates are enabled/disabled in a particular GKE and EKS cluster version without having to check the kubelet configuration inside a deployed cluster node? I don't want to deploy a cluster just to check this. I've check both GKE and EKS changelogs and docs, but I couldn't see a list of enabled/disabled feature gates list. Thanks in advance!
z3r0_Geek 12 months ago • 50%
I didn't know that feature. So, if I understood it well, if you have a Slack community you could move your people to Matrix with no pain. Sounds really good.
Anyway, I just cannot understand why the fact that Google dropped support for XMPP could hurt it that much. I'm not possitioning myself, I just cannot understand. That's all.
z3r0_Geek 12 months ago • 50%
I wonder why Matrix is being so well received by the community over XMPP which has been around for years and is also federated.
z3r0_Geek 12 months ago • 36%
I wonder what "disinformation" exactly means here
z3r0_Geek 12 months ago • 100%
In fact, they are the owners: https://forgejo.org/faq/#who-owns-the-forgejo-domains-and-trademarks
The Forgejo domains are in the custody of Codeberg e.V. a non-profit based in Germany and dedicated to hosting Free Software projects since 2019. It is ultimately in control of Forgejo and its bylaws guarantee it will keep further the interest of the general public. No trademark was registered at this point in time.
z3r0_Geek 12 months ago • 100%
That is still WIP
z3r0_Geek 12 months ago • 100%
😅
z3r0_Geek 12 months ago • 100%
I had no idea this could exists. Could you please share some gameplay video link? I couldnt find any
z3r0_Geek 12 months ago • 100%
If an entire region goes down, the Terraform status file stored there will not be useful at all because it only stores information about the resources you deployed in that particular region and your resources deployed there will also go down.
Replicating the status file in another region will not be useful either because it will only contain information about the resources that are down in your region.
The status file inventories all the resources you have deployed to your cloud provider. Basically Terraform uses it to know what resources are being managed by the current Terraform code and to be idempotent.
If you want to set up another region for disaster recovery (Active-Passive) you can use the same Terraform code, but use a different configuration (meaning different tfvars files) to deploy the resources to a different region (not necessarily to another account). Just make sure that all your data is replicated into the passive region.
z3r0_Geek 12 months ago • 100%
Does this answer your question?
https://min.io/docs/minio/kubernetes/upstream/operations/data-recovery.html
z3r0_Geek 12 months ago • 100%
My apologies if I'm saying something stupid, but I see that this is built on top of Drone, which stopped being Open Source several years ago. Does this means that Drone, as part of Gitness, has become Open Source again?
z3r0_Geek 1 year ago • 100%
That has much more sense that I though
z3r0_Geek 1 year ago • 100%
I totally agree that. But I suppose that with this rebranding they are looking for moving away the original project as much as possible.
I'm not sure if this movement has a lot of sense right now because by when the project had finally been released it will still being a fork of the original Terraform, but they may change this in a near future.
OpenTF project has been renamed to **OpenTofu**. * New homepage: https://opentofu.org/ * New Github organization: https://github.com/opentofu Personally, I feel happy to see this project geting form and I cannot wait to see what happens at the end.
z3r0_Geek 1 year ago • 100%
Hi! I'm afraid there is not a solution that groups all the functionality you that are looking for. Anyway, these are the AWS services I use for most of the requirements you described. Take at count most of them require AWS services and your company will be charged for most of them.
Default blocking for certain CIDRs.
Exceptions for certain IP/Host and port combos within those CIDRs.
Use Security Groups (free cost): https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/vpc-security-groups.html
Authentication and authorisation to use said exceptions (i.e. user tracking).
You can implement user Authentication using AWS Cognito: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/cognito/latest/developerguide/what-is-amazon-cognito.html.
Additionally you can delegate the user authentication by using Application Load Balancers and Cognito. See: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/application/listener-authenticate-users.html
Detailed logging on connections; source, dest, request and response sizes, ports, protocols, whatever we can get out hands on.
All of the above for all (?) kinds of TCP connections (HTTPS, Postgres, Oracle DB, MongoDB, as examples).
For connections through the Load Balancer y suggest you to enable access logs (requires an S3 bucket and will generate additional charges). For the rest of connections you may want to check this but I never tried it.
z3r0_Geek 1 year ago • 100%
Hi! After more than 6 years using Ansible I have not found a way to print the standard output of a program running under the command
module, so I'm afraid the only way to achieve this is exactly what you suggest: using a debug
task, something that has always seemed terribly ugly to me.
A true story about how Arch Linux migrated its packaging infrastructure and tooling to GitLab.
https://opentf.org/announcement
https://lemmy.world/post/2519497
I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy.