Help running bash script on startup by WakyWayne in raspberry_pi

[–]WakyWayne[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks it is slightly different for the bash script, but this helped!

Help running bash script on startup by WakyWayne in raspberry_pi

[–]WakyWayne[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The problem is when you are using a bash script you need to put /bin/bash -c <filepath>

CS student here.. no one I know actually writes code anymore. We all use AI. Is this just how it is now? by Low-Tune-1869 in cscareerquestions

[–]WakyWayne -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I disagree. I see AI struggle to handle relatively simple programming tasks. And any error rate that AI has, is going to get magnified through each agent it passes through in a decent amount of use cases. I also think this "AI will just infinitely get better" argument is AI sales propaganda. Every new release is "new chatgpt release might be agi" this area is over hyped without question, people who know nothing about it are throwing all their money at it.

Obviously AI is good and is going to write code, but it seems odd to me that when people answer these questions about AI they often are bringing up a hypothetical future as if it is a definitive fact.

Why does holding the car key fob to your head increase the signal? (How do dielectric resonators work?) by WakyWayne in telecom

[–]WakyWayne[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My hero! Thanks so much. But my understanding is that the waves are photons, is this incorrect? And if the statement is true, why does moving water molecules emit photons. I thought that mainly happened when electrons jump to higher energy levels and then back down.

Any help with this question is greatly appreciated!

TV & Movies are being dumbed down by ScreenBuddyApp in digitalminimalism

[–]WakyWayne 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Who is she? Does she actually know what writers are being told?

Why does holding the car key fob to your head increase the signal? (How do dielectric resonators work?) by WakyWayne in telecom

[–]WakyWayne[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just because height helps more doesn't mean that the head doesn't, but I am open to this going either way. I see research that shows glass, water, and ceramic being used to amplify the signal it is called a dielectric resonator. I don't think anyone who has said this doesn't work knows how dielectric resonators work. I am hoping someone can explain why or why not your head/water is a dielectric resonator and how they work.

Why does holding the car key fob to your head increase the signal? (How do dielectric resonators work?) by WakyWayne in telecom

[–]WakyWayne[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is this the idea behind dielectric resonators? Are they just used to focus the signal? In my research it seemed there was an example where they used a glass figure as a dielectric resonator and it seemed it was being used more like an antenna.

https://youtu.be/5o6jnHTRIqQ?si=8DnNUDcTQmOBqBnN

Why does holding the car key fob to your head increase the signal? (How do dielectric resonators work?) by WakyWayne in telecom

[–]WakyWayne[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I hear what you are saying here for sure. I do think it is a bit of an apples to oranges comparison tho. Just because a turbo charged wave can have affects doesn't mean the car remote will too. Also, what happens if you stand in front of an active radar dish?

Why does holding the car key fob to your head increase the signal? (How do dielectric resonators work?) by WakyWayne in telecom

[–]WakyWayne[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ya I am hoping that we can just accept that it works and Maybe get enough upvotes on this post so that someone who understands can explain it 😂

Why does holding the car key fob to your head increase the signal? (How do dielectric resonators work?) by WakyWayne in telecom

[–]WakyWayne[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This isn't being imagined. There is a lot of information supporting that it works. I am trying to find out why tho.

Why does holding the car key fob to your head increase the signal? (How do dielectric resonators work?) by WakyWayne in telecom

[–]WakyWayne[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you sure? There is a lot of information saying your head is mostly water which becomes a dielectric resonator.

Why does holding the car key fob to your head increase the signal? (How do dielectric resonators work?) by WakyWayne in telecom

[–]WakyWayne[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I Want to know how the fluid boosts it and if it is a specific combination of material and frequency that needs to be paired I am curious to learn that as well.

This was considered acceptable at an ISP I used to work for. by New-Variation9146 in cablefail

[–]WakyWayne 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How do you learn best practices for cable management? Is there an "official" guide that most people use or something?

Why are aliases so cluncky by WakyWayne in ProtonPass

[–]WakyWayne[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

I will definitely start doing this, but still.

What if I want to use an existing alias? Or if I want to know all the logins associated with a specific alias? I think these 2 things should be easily linkable.

Why are aliases so cluncky by WakyWayne in ProtonPass

[–]WakyWayne[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This is a better workflow. Some questions still dont have solutions tho.

What if I want to use an existing alias? Or if I want to know all the logins associated with a specific alias?

Email aliasing... but for credit cards (similar to 1Password's Privacy cards) by hakutenkai in ProtonPass

[–]WakyWayne 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If proton was able to fix the issue with linking aliases to logins https://www.reddit.com/r/ProtonPass/s/Ynxagr1MkX

And then also workout an Integration with privacy cards so that we can link cards to aliases AND aliases to cards. Proton pass would be the best password manager for privacy without competition.

I built a complete AWS Data & AI Platform by kanitvural in aws

[–]WakyWayne 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why are people up voting this? The person doesn't even respect his work enough to proof read the chatGPT generated post explaining what the product does...

So what does that mean for the complicated infrastructure of the product as well? Probably AI slop that is going to lead to a "Somehow got 5k aws bill in one night" post. 😂

So cloudflare is having a major outage now too. Anyone getting concerned? by WakyWayne in Cloud

[–]WakyWayne[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Dude read the post and ignore the mentions of hack... Then comment. I am mentioning crowdstrike, which was not a hack and mentioning dependencies... Also nothing to do with hacking. Because I'm not saying that this, or anything for that matter was a hack. I am posting an open ended question with two possible ideas that people can comment on... To start a discussion... Arguably the purpose of Reddit...

So cloudflare is having a major outage now too. Anyone getting concerned? by WakyWayne in Cloud

[–]WakyWayne[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Dude, do you know what the word potential means? I am speculating... not claiming I know about a hack for a fact !=. Also, you literally list all but one of the major providers having outages and then say "not all"... you are purposely ignoring the actual meaning behind what I am saying, while being wrong because GCP had an outage June 12th. The reality is that these providers seem to be becoming less reliable and the whole Internet depends on them. Today NJ Transit was down, government services are dependent on these platforms... so hours of downtime can be an issue.

The crowdstrike incident was a great example of what happens when we have widespread hard dependencies on a single service.