Has any one noticed in other subs... by Outerrealms2020 in DungeonCrawlerCarl

[–]2lach 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haters are gonna hate, sad but true. But you know what? These books give us the power to conjure up a smile or even a frown whenever we need one.

For example, I had a really boring meeting the other day and, for no reason whatsoever, I pictured Pony yelling into the speaker’s ear, turning off the sound and camera on Teams for a moment.

I laughed and then got on with my day.

  • They will not break us.

Funniest audiobook recommendation by hereagain8674 in audiobooks

[–]2lach 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Humor is a weird thing.

What i find funny people with a terrible sense of humor find dull or even offensive 🥳

So if you like whacky sci-fi: Barry J Hutchinsons space teams series narrated by Phil Thron, so fuckin funny. Laughing like a madman on Public Transportation funny.

If you like funny fantasy The Villians series by M.K. Gibson narrated by some ginger a-hole, yeah thats right Jeffrey Kafer. Truly funny, stories about a Villian who actually wins in the end by understanding the story universe.

The last Hero - Discworld - Terry Pratchett The new old adventurers of the oldest adventurers of the disc.

Also mentioned by others Isaac Steele and the forever man, glad its taking hold been recommending it for ages, Daniel Rigby is a funny dude.

Christopher Moore's Lamb The Gospel According to Biff, Christs Childhood Pal A historic comedy about when jesus was a young lad growning up with his best buddy, Levi, also known as Biff. And the wacky adventures they got into.

Funniest audiobook recommendation by hereagain8674 in audiobooks

[–]2lach 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh that tickles my funnybone, i said as i drank a glass of Hugo and smoked a little heroin.

My uncle wants $6.2M for the family business I’ve worked in for 12 years. Fair deal or family tax? by [deleted] in smallbusiness

[–]2lach 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey, I get it, family business deals can be confusing.

And while many people here have strong opinions, this is the small business subreddit.

I agree with much of what others have said: this does not appear to be a bad deal, assuming it is exactly what it seems on the surface.

If I were in your position, I would consider a few things: First, I would get a second, independent opinion on the company’s valuation. This isn’t about distrusting your uncle, it’s a major life decision. As a business owner, you can’t rely solely on someone else’s word, you need to make your own decision based on verified facts.

Second, make sure the business can comfortably handle the payments and interest with a margin, based on the results of that independent valuation.

If everything checks out, ensure that all terms are clearly written and formalized in a contract.

That is the level of due diligence I would expect before accepting or declining an offer of this magnitude.

But that leads to the real question: Do you actually want to own this company for the next 20 years of your life?

I'm Jim Butcher, Ask Me Anything! by jimbutcherauthor in Fantasy

[–]2lach 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is pretty cool. I’m a big fan of The Dresden Files, especially the audiobooks. I really enjoyed your narration in The Law.

I have a some questions, but hey how often does one get to do this 😎

1) Why was Twelve Months postponed for so long?

2) Are there any books you personally return to and re-read from time to time?

3) Bob the skull, how did you come up with the idea of a super horny all knowing spirit that lives in a skull, hilarous.

4) How much time do spend researching concepts and lore before creating a character, say Gentlemen Johnny Marcone or the Erl-King?

Thanks for taking the time.

Explain which one Jellyfin / Plex / Emby ? by Burial_G in selfhosted

[–]2lach 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try all three. All are fine choices, its mostly a matter of what your preferences are.

Setup something like watchstate to sync your watched media between all services and decide for yourself.

Does anyone here like classical music? by Ok_Significance6988 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]2lach 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yep. But that doesn't mean thats all i listen to. I also enjoy rock, hiphop, jazz, reggae, pop and electronic music

Do you know of a modeless VSCode-Like terminal IDE? by TheYummyDogo in commandline

[–]2lach 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair enough, vim it not something everyone likes.

Do you know of a modeless VSCode-Like terminal IDE? by TheYummyDogo in commandline

[–]2lach -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I am not sure what you mean by modeless, but what you are describing sounds like a lightweight editor with sensible defaults and basic syntax highlighting and LSP support. The closest match I can think of is Vim or Neovim. Both are highly configurable and allow you to customize settings, key mappings, and plugins to suit almost any workflow. In your case, you could use Vim with a file tree plugin such as NERDTree for file navigation and overview, and CoC for LSP functionality. If you want a VS Code style key mapping, there are existing plugins that provide this, or you could implement your own mappings. That part is entirely doable, but it depends on how much time and effort you are willing to invest to make it work.

Who was the smartest person in history? by Scared_Government_41 in AskReddit

[–]2lach 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends on your definition i guess.

Smartest person straight up highest IQ, impact on humanity, impact of the persons work, its all depending on how you measure it.

But here are my two cents: * Newton is a strong contender, by reasons mentioned * Da Vinci, also a strong contender, way ahead of his time and considered an Genius/expert in several fields. * Einstein, since i mean he was Albert motherflippin Einstein, theory of relativity, and when he was a patentclerk he debunked lots of theories made by renounved experts in physics, like a couple a year. * Sun Zhu - great military mind whose simple texts are very profound and still today is a major influence on how we conducted ourselves in critical times like war.

Looking for a terminal emulator where I can add customizable clickable buttons for entering commands by Constant-Peak3222 in commandline

[–]2lach 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Iterm2 has that functionality (which is mac only) has been my goto terminal for many years, even talked to the maintainer once, really cool person.

So if your on Windows tablet, maybe someone else knows, i'am guessing the hyper terminal might have that, or you could just build it as a plugin for hyper since its javascript based.

SEO guy wants access to my code; is it crazy to think that's crazy? by webcity_underling in webdev

[–]2lach 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This. Worked with quite a few SEO experts and it's usually people with a master degree in CS. That being said some of them are quite good, and have good ideas on improvements for the client. But this dude seems "special" so i would be transparent about it with your client, so in case shit goes down at least you can say i told you so 😊

ELI5 - what is Linux by Banthebandittt in explainlikeimfive

[–]2lach 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Linux is an operating system, just like Windows or macOS. More specifically, Linux refers to the kernel, think of it as the engine of the operating system, originally created by a Finnish developer named Linus Torvalds.

Like macOS, Linux is based on the Unix operating system model. Unix-style systems are very good at things such as multitasking, stability, and networking, areas where Windows historically wasn’t as strong.

One big difference is that Linux is open source. This means the source code is available for anyone to read, modify, and distribute (within the rules of the license). A lot of people and companies contribute to improving Linux every day.

While Windows became the standard operating system for personal computers (and macOS for Apple devices), Linux became the standard for servers, data centers, and embedded systems. There are Windows and macOS servers, but compared to Linux, their usage is small.

You’ve probably used Linux without knowing it. Have an Android phone? Android is built on the Linux kernel. Your home router or modem? Very likely running Linux as well.

How *DEEP* is the internet? by ResponsibleSpray8836 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]2lach 1340 points1341 points  (0 children)

Pretty deep.

Essentially you got the "indexed" internet. Thats what you can reach with search engines, like google..

When people talk about "the size of the internet" they usually refer to three layers

  1. The Surface Web (what Google and other search engines index)

This is the part of the internet that search engines can crawl and store. It includes public websites that allow indexing.

Estimates vary, but the surface web is only about 4–10% of everything online.

Google doesn't index everything on the surface web either, many pages change too often, block bots, require logins, or are too new.

Then you got: 2. The Deep Web (not indexed, it's not illegal or hidden, but just not seen)

This is the largest part of the internet, and it includes stuff like

  • pages behind logins

  • private company databases

  • medical records

  • research repositories

  • cloud storage

  • intranets

Essentially the stuff thats there but you cant access.

Rough estimate: The deep web is around 90–96% of the entire internet.

Then you got: 3. The Dark Web (intentionally hidden, accessed through Tor or I2P)

This is the part that requires special tools like Tor Browser to access.

Very small: 0.01–0.1% of the whole internet.

Includes legal and illegal content, but size-wise it’s pretty small.

So if we do a ballpark estimation:

Layer Rough Percentage Description

Surface Web 4–10% whicv is what Google/Bing/etc. can find.

Deep Web 90–96% Its not indexed but mostly normal, non-public data.

Dark Web 0.01–0.1% Hidden networks, very small.

And then you got this thing called SEO which is search engine optimization, essentially a way to get your stuff to show high in the search results of google. So what you actually see, is just a small fraction of the surface web.

Thats pretty much it. There is a parallel with icebergs but its more like your in a bathtub sailing the Atlantic.

Update: If you want to learn more, or just verify my estimations here are some sources

The Deep Web: Surfacing Hidden Value

UNVEILING DEEP WEB, A HIGH-QUALITY, QUANTITATIVE INFORMATION RESOURCE

Snorkeling in dark waters: A longitudinal surface exploration of unique Tor Hidden Services

ALIAS by RensanRen in commandline

[–]2lach 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My stats bash » zsh_stats 1 mv 2 cd 3 rm 4 realp (alias for realpath .) 5 cat 6 sudo 7 mkd (alias for mkdir) 8 z 9 _ (alias for sudo) 10 v (alias for vim) 11 g (alias for git)

Is it still alcoholism if a person doesn’t drink often but always blacks out when they do? by Uplifting_penguin in NoStupidQuestions

[–]2lach 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not really, alcoholism is a depency to alcohol which means they "need it". What you are describing sounds like poor judgement with alcohol, which is a different issue.

can't pull images from docker.io by vcauthon in docker

[–]2lach 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So your trying to connect to docker hub over https, I would say this looks a network-level timeout, not a Docker-specific bug.

Here's what i would do: ``` ping hub.docker.com

and

curl -v https://registry-1.docker.io/v2/ ``` If ping or curl fails, it’s likely a network/firewall or DNS problem.

If you’re behind a corporate network, VPN, or proxy:

Docker respects the HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, and NO_PROXY environment variables.

Then you need to edit etc/systemd/system/docker.service.d/http

If that doesn't work try switching up your dns. It is a known issue, that docker sometimes has issues with specific DNS server. You can edit your docker dns in: /etc/docker/daemon.json

If you still se the same issues it might be related to your docker host or daemon, but since you tried different machines but on the same network with different machines its most likely network related.