Migrating here (or maybe keeping both) from @ArcaneSlime@lemmy.ml

Will put an eternal curse on your enemies for a Cinemageddon invite.

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  • 66 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 30th, 2023

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  • Ah, so you’d need to know your dosage for that type beforehand, and if you didn’t know it you can’t just wing it. Still though, might be beneficial to know that for emergencies like this because it sounds preferable to certain death.

    There should be a little chart your doc gives you at diagnosis (or something, spitballing here) that lays out the dosages you’d need for X, Y, and Z brands so that if say you use X and they’re out (or your kid freezes it or something) you can just consult the dosage chart and get Y for now.


  • Is there any reason a diabetic has to get the newer patented formulas instead of the old one that the pic talks about which is regularly sold for around $25 a vial in the US without insurance?

    I know the new stuff works faster and you don’t have to worry about your diet as much so I’m sure it’s much easier, but why would you have to die instead of just managing your diet and using the $25 stuff for a month in this emergency situation?

    Don’t get me wrong all medicine should be free and stuff but like, why die instead of switching to the cheap stuff and dietary management for a month?




  • So, I’m gonna be a bit of a contrarian here, but my main advice is to abandon requirements 1 and 3.

    As to 2, you’d be looking for an immutable or atomic distro, those are harder to fuck up.

    BUT I urge you not to be afraid of the terminal, it isn’t as scary as it looks! Try watching/following along with a couple “linux terminal for beginners” or “bash for beginners” videos on youtube like they’re a class. They’ll teach you the basics you need to be a LOT more comfortable within like an hour, and you’ll be a lot better off for it. I did the same and now a few years in I prefer the terminal for many things and cringe when I have to use the windows GUI at work for something that would take seconds on linux by typing one command that amounts to a sentence. It’s a very powerful and convenient tool and I reccomend not shutting yourself off from it.

    No matter the distro, you’re likely not going to fuck it up so bad it can’t be fixed, but do be careful when using sudo in the terminal as that is when it’s more likely. That said, no matter what (even if you stayed on windows), you should keep offsite backups of your most important files, things you couldn’t just redownload again. That way if you do fuck up, you can always just reinstall and replace your files no problem, it’s free! Sure nobody wants to take like an hour to do that, but still nothing gets lost which is the most important part.

    As for not requiring a password, no. You want the password checks. Security is important, and what’s more the password checks themselves can act as a “be careful this could fuck your shit up” warning. As annoying as they are, it can be a good thing!

    I’m sure you’ll get plenty “try this distro” responses so I’m not even going to go there, but my advice honestly applies to all distros equally.

    Tl;dr: Passwords safe, terminal good actually.


  • Yeah same here, they deleted my old addr for inactivity, fine, so I made a new one. “Flagged for review, cannot send/receive emails at this addr yet” 2d go by, “flagged harder, reach out, using the email that can’t send email, to tuta support and explain why you need this acct.” Tried to send the email, perhaps unsurprisingly, to no success.

    So I created a Disroot acct instead. They also flagged me for review (but then approved me, and I did it twice so I have two disroot accts which I need for different reasons), and their sign up site is pretty bad (it says “weak password” until you get enough chars in the prompt, coulda just told me that instead of making me insane rolling 30 different passwords in keepass…) but still, much better now, I have IMAP and disroot doesn’t delete for inactivity, so, woohoo!



  • Tbf, I don’t read unames, and my app shows the pronouns in line with and the same color as the unames, so I don’t read those either.

    Literally no clue who I’m even responding to right now. Doesn’t really matter who it is either, my response would be the same regardless of your race/gender/whatever else.

    The one exception is whenever I see something profoundly stupid I will sometimes check the uname and go “ah yes cowbee again how predictable” but that’s just pure entertainment and learning who here not to waste energy on, most comments are just comments and don’t warrant that level of self preservation.



  • Hey I have a quick question I haven’t been able to find the answer to regarding nnn, if you don’t mind.

    So, I have nnn and the plugins set up as normal, however I need to run some of those plugins as root. If I sudo nnn, my plugins don’t transfer, so I put the plugin files in root’s .config and the line in root’s .bashrc, but I can’t figure out how to do the source ~/.bashrc command part for root’s .bashrc.

    If I source /root/.bashrc it says permission denied, if I run it with sudo it says sudo: source: command not found.

    You wouldn’t happen to have been down this road before, would you?



  • Tbf, whenever there’s a private tool like graphene, tor, tails, whonix, mullvad, matrix, jabber, pgp, etc?

    Yes, criminals will use it, because of course they don’t want to get caught for crimes just as much as we don’t want to be tracked in general (maybe more, because crimes lol).

    But also, criminals use roads, trains, busses, the USPS and private mail carriers, normal phones including SMS and calls, facetime, email, they drink water and eat food, on and on.

    “Criminals use it” is a fucking stupid reason to ban anything, in fact it’s a good reason we should adopt it too in terms of privacy, because if it works for them doing way worse than I am, then it ought to work just fine for me too. Besides over half of those criminals are just using WHM or whatever is the go to these days, define “criminals.”


  • I find sometimes the gui takes a while to manipulate say 300 folders. Like if I want to move all the mp4 files from a folder structure into another directory but leave everything else you can use something like

    find /path/to/piracy/directory/ -name '*.mp4' -exec cp -r {} /path/to/piracy/storage/ \;
    

    And it’ll send em on over.

    And I didn’t remember that command, I had it in a script, so to find it to post here I just typed:

    cat ~/Documents/scripts/scriptname/
    

    And hit enter, and it gave me the info in the file. Tbh it was even easier than that, with tab completion I just had to type:

    cat Doc[tab]/sc[tab]/sc[tab]

    But back to the piracy, then to delete everything left over from that first script (like .nfo files) just

    cd ~/piracy/directory/
    rm -r *
    exit
    

    And will remove everything instantly.

    To make it easier you can make a script with the first command, even chain it with the same for avi etc, and you could probably have it auto clean the source directory afterwards, but I like to do that manually. You can also (in most piracy programs) tell it to run a script on complete, so you could have that all automated by that process (if you don’t store them in an external drive like me.) And you can get way fancier with it too, I’m very much still learning, there’s way more that can be done pretty easily. I do still use the GUI sometimes too though and for some stuff it is easier, it’s definitely not an all or nothing thing, both is better!

    Also I’m totally not a pirate that was just an example…cough cough.



  • Moving files, deleting files, text editing, converting files, stuff like btop, a lot really.

    When I started I watched a few “linux cli tutorial” and “bash basics” or “bash for beginners” type videos on youtube and followed along in my terminal like a class, pausing when needed. That’s all it took for me to be off to the races learning more because of just how easy it is to do a lot of stuff, and I still learn more all the time.

    Couple tips (really some of this applies regardless of cli or gui):

    • Keep offsite back-ups, just in case. Worst case scenario you reinstall and replace your files.

    • Be careful with sudo but otherwise you’ll be fine. That’s not to say don’t use sudo just be mindful.

    • Learn just the basics at first and then learn more as you go and get more comfortable, I kinda use the unix philosophy for it here and only learn it if I need it, most often.

    • You can save semi-commonly used commands to a txt file and reference it later, really helps for stuff you only use every now and again. There’s also the history command and ctrl+r but I still find the file useful.

    It really isn’t as hard as it had looked before I started, and I use it constantly now.



  • Though tbf when searching for linux help you’re more likely to actually get it, and it may not work or you may have to kinda translate it to your distro, but it’s less likely to be that type of malicious tool you speak of on windows.

    Meanwhile those “tools” are either SEOd to hell and back so the only thing that comes up when searching is them instead of some useful stackoverflow page, or windows docs post-w8 themselves tell you to fix every problem by reinstalling.

    Actually that’s a BIG reason I finally swapped to linux, for years it had been “but idk how to fix shit like I can on windows” until that tipping point when it became “well at least I can find a fix for linux, windows just keeps saying reinstall and the internet says ‘use this totally not sketchy proprietary and sometimes expensive software.’”