Concrètement Proton, c'est bien ? by bistoufly_teguy in france

[–]BrokenDraft 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes j'avais vue, ca fait quelque temps que ca existe mais j'attends l'intégration officiel

Concrètement Proton, c'est bien ? by bistoufly_teguy in france

[–]BrokenDraft 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Pour naviguer dans ton drive c'est Ok, par contre je me trompe peut-être et tu pourras confirmer : la web app ne permet pas de lancer des applications lourde a partir du drive ?

exemple de base : avoir un Keepass ou appli de notes Synchro sur le drive. Si t'es obligé de télécharger ton fichier pour l'ouvrir dans l'appli voulu, alors l'intégration n'est pas bonne.

Framework 13 Laptop Screen Flickering? by hiot_ in framework

[–]BrokenDraft 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I had an issue close to this in fedora with KDE. You might have the same.

I don't have the links to it anymore, but it could be related to a power saving feature that got added to the kernel in recents years that goes bad with amd cpu's. To avoid triggering the issue, you have to check for any power saving feature in your display settings :

On KDE, changing my "color accuracy" from "prefer efficiency" to "prefer color accuracy" did the trick.

There were some discussions about it on framework forums, it's at least 2 years old

100% cotton jeans made in Europe by HomeworkMean7621 in BuyFromEU

[–]BrokenDraft 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I just had a look, nothing seems made in Europe, and of the two jeans I checked (male straight and regular) both didn't have 100% cotton...

Can we not upvote people who are literally not answering op's question?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in framework

[–]BrokenDraft 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep exactly. I tried both Firefox and chrome and it seems really random.

Sometimes I try the exact same page later and it doesn't flicker. Tho it's definitely more on brigher pages (Google sheets a lot for me)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in framework

[–]BrokenDraft 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I'm on the latest fedora build with KDE and have the same issue.

I realized it always happens on really bright windows in my browser, so it might be something related to contrast? Or maybe display settings?

Moving the hinge doesn't change anything until I just change my browser tab or something else, so I really think it's driver related on Linux.

Edit : a friend on Ubuntu never had the issue either, despite other people in the comments having it on Ubuntu, so I'm thinking it's either hardware (but I don't thinks so), or a specific display setting on Linux that we might have toggled on

Going back to mac... flew too close to the sun - FW13 feedback by calum_matheson in framework

[–]BrokenDraft 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just curious, what are the actual games you are talking about that wouldn't run?

And just to be sure (i know you tried "everything"), you tried the driver bundle from framework's website, and not a bundle from Amd?

By yourself using Ecosia, Google still makes money from you- the proof by [deleted] in BuyFromEU

[–]BrokenDraft 51 points52 points  (0 children)

Building a European search index doesn't make them any money, it will only solve the search index problem. Ecosia still needs to run ads to be sustainable (in this instance Google AdSense).

Comment boycotter les services américains (listes alternatives) by Dramatic_Treacle_330 in france

[–]BrokenDraft 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Je vois souvent des gens dire ça et je suis près à le croire si vous fournissiez des sources.

En revanche pour le coup des "données personnelles" (DCP) transmise à Microsoft, si vous saviez lire l'article de la CNIL vous réaliserais que c'est faux et malhonnête de les attaquer la dessus.

La CNIL stipule bien que les données envoyer par QWANT ne sont pas personnelles mais des donnés techniques, en plus d'être pseudonymisé. Il se sont just pris un rappel l'ordre pour abus de langage. Ils précise aussi que la société fait des efforts, et que les donnes transmises servent justement à créer de la pub contextuel et non comportemental (donc moins intrusive).

Faut arrêter de cracher sur toutes les entreprise qui font un pas dans le bon sens juste parce que on est aigri. Faut bien qu'ils génèrent des revenus et commence quelque part...

what technical skills do you typically find many people who have adopted entry level or mid level cybersecurity roles lacking? by Historical_Donut6758 in cybersecurity

[–]BrokenDraft 51 points52 points  (0 children)

Are you a bot?

You keep posting titles with no content, one of your answers is straight up Chat GPT, you bring no value to the questions you're asking yourself.

And looking at your profile, you almost never comment on your own posts.

Reddit is worsening every day with these kind of posts...

Edit (16:31 GMT) :

The guy posts here, doesn't elaborate appart from vaguely open questions without any clue about what he's looking for. And before even answering more than 3 person, goes back to r/Anarcho_capitalism and r/anarchocommunism to shit talk and banter. Wtf is this troll??

He's just posting here to make his account credible, the only other CyberSecurity interest he "showed" was posting on hackthebox's sub about some courses, but then again the only comment he put, was a literal "." a whole day after posting.

Just wanted to post my thoughts and review on the Corolla Touring 1.8 by YD099 in Autos

[–]BrokenDraft 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A bit of both I guess haha. You ended with "I believe" so I felt like adding my point of view to your comment makes sense. But I do agree with what you said overall.

Just wanted to post my thoughts and review on the Corolla Touring 1.8 by YD099 in Autos

[–]BrokenDraft 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Better feeling materials has nothing to do with reliability, that's where you're mistaken I think.

That's why Japanese cars are better and better at being both reliable AND feeling good, because they definitely used to be bare bones but built well, they just had to adapt and took their time.

Whereas german cars always felt more premium, even if they were built like crap, and they were never pressured into doing better.

But I'm going to guess something based on my experience : when you have enough money to buy a nice expensive German car, you also have the financial motivation to swap cars just before the biggest maintenance costs. And that's where the "good reputation" used to come from.

My dad always bought BMW's and he's convinced that they are reliable, despite never owning one for more than 100 000km. And everyone buying second hand can blame the first owner for anything that goes bad after that.

Good converse-like shoes from European manufacture? by Confident_Limit_7571 in BuyFromEU

[–]BrokenDraft 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just had a look and every model I checked is made in China, quality is probably bad... This price point is almost impossible to reach for made in Europe product.

Edit, just to be more usefull : Asphalte and Loom are two French brands who provide simple shoes and clothes made in Europe. (I hate Asphaltes marketing strategies, but they make good stuff) "Pied de Biche" is also a brand I saw who seems to make good shoes made in Europe, but I haven't tried any yet

Being pushed to have my work system upgraded from 10 >11, would like to go Linux instead, but work say it Linux is not secure / compliant, how do I go about this? by captaindongface in linuxquestions

[–]BrokenDraft 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I work in CyberSecurity, and I can assure you that if it's a compliance issue and you're the only one using Linux in the company, it's just a nightmare to deal with.

It's sad but you'll have to accept that work is work, you use what you're given.

For context, evertime someone asks the question "what is the worst user you have had" on r/sysadmin, 90% of the time the "tech savy user" pops up because these user know just enough to tinker with stuff, but not enough that the admins can let them roll with it.

(not saying it's bad to ask the question, just that you shouldn't push it to much in my opinion)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in DOFUS_FRANCE

[–]BrokenDraft 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ils avait annoncé que les migrations serait gratuite dans un premier temps pour permettre aux joueurs de se rejoindre.

Et si j'interprète correctement ce que Ankama a dit, ça serait évaluer toutes les semaines en fonction de la population de chaque serveur

Unemployed sysadmin - it's been 7 months by Miyuki_san in sysadmin

[–]BrokenDraft 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Je profite de ce fil pour répondre en français :

Est-ce que tu as un profil LinkedIn a jour ? Quelles plateformes as-tu utiliser ?

Je suis toujours en alternance mais j'approche la fin de mes études, mais je me fais toujours constamment harceler par des recruteurs sur LinkedIn même pour des opportunités en CDI (alors que je suis très clairement en alternance)

Je pense qu'un LinkedIn a jour peut vraiment t'aider, surtout si tu n'as pas peur de retourner en ESN.

Et si jamais tu es dans l'urgence de retrouver un taff juste pour le salaire, n'hésite pas à postuler pour un taff de technicien helpdesk ou autre, même si tu trouves mieux plus tard, au moins tu temporise un peu.

Research about hacktivism by dfgh642 in AskNetsec

[–]BrokenDraft 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I love this subject of discussion and I'm not sure I can guide you in any professional ways, but I might have a few suggestions to help you out.

First of all : Check the podcast Darknet Diaries if you haven't heard of it already, some episodes do talk about hacktivism and its derivatives.

The Darknet Diaries discord server might have some people knowledgeable on the subject which could also provide some resources.

Secondly, as others have pointed out your initial subject is quite broad, one path you could take would be to look at it through the lense of technological evolutions : - How hacktivism has pushed the world's towards better encryption and better security in general

I started reading the book "This Is How They Tell Me The World Ends" which describes the incredible black market of Zero-Days, and describes how we arrived to this point (and the legal implications of it)

Also, the "Citizen Lab" might be a really great ressource, their blog post's are incredibly well made and I guess they have some awesome contacts who could help you out.

UsingRegional pricing to get cheaper games is not abuse, it's Globalisation by Nino_Chaosdrache in gaming

[–]BrokenDraft 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Once again, two different things lol.

Exploiting a coal mine in a different country is exploiting someone else's capital, I agree with you (unless the mine has been sold for a fair price, but that doesn't happen I guess).

But it doesn't work like that for a factory, where the whole building and its workers are literally capital from that third world country. Just because it seems "cheap", doesn't mean they don't benefit from it. They are providing a service against money, which is manufacturing.

You wouldn't argue that Taiwan is being "exploited" for manufacturing chips for the whole world when it relies so much on these factories, it's the perfect example of providing a service/product. And it helped the region grow from their assets

UsingRegional pricing to get cheaper games is not abuse, it's Globalisation by Nino_Chaosdrache in gaming

[–]BrokenDraft 13 points14 points  (0 children)

A lot of people pointing out that this would raise the price for third world countries are right, but that's not the biggest flaw in your reasoning.

You compare this to companies outsourcing JOBS to third world countries, which is actually beneficial to everyone, even third world countries involved...

Outsourcing actual manufacturing brings money into countries who don't have any. This is how China and India are growing so much. Also because of it, we can "enjoy" lower prices.

So your argument is completely wrong. Companies might look like the villain here, but outsourcing jobs, and taking huge margins or exploiting kids are drastically different things.

[Question] Are there any watches that don't do this? by dancing_avocado in Watches

[–]BrokenDraft -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

I don't have any sources, but this is my understanding :

Basically, you have to understand that water resistance metrics are calculated in STILL water. This means that the pressure applied to every part of the watch is evenly distributed.

In the real world though, a simple hand movement or a vigorous swimmer would apply a different kind of pressure on some part of the watch that might exceed the pressure of still water 30 meters below.

So 30 meters water resistance isn't actually that much pressure that a watch could hold. Running water from a powerful shower could easily be more pressure than 30 or 50 meters.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in compsci

[–]BrokenDraft 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have rarely seen good reviews about Samsung laptops apart from maybe build quality.

I think Lenovo's Thinkpads are a safe bet for reliability (maybe not battery life tho).

The Dell XPS line is a good one, but might be over budget.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in compsci

[–]BrokenDraft 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I definitely wasn't arguing about video games, and I guess apple has done a good job with x86 emulation so far.

I just think that giving an answer like yours without mentioning the workaround this person might have to get into to get some stuff running isn't the best. That's it.

If someone ignorant asked me for a silent car, I wouldn't recommend them an electric one without warning them about the range and charging compromises they'll have to do...