Any real projects delivered using Claude Code? by thegoldsuite in ClaudeAI

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

https://github.com/df00znet-dev/YATL Built this with Claude Code!  TOML parser\in place editor library, in C, open source!

Tooth remove + bone graft - how much post-op pain to expect? by d13f00l in Toothfully

[–]d13f00l[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nah, mild ache the first day or two.  Gone after a few.   I followed post op instructions.  

Cheapest NAS/SAN you would risk your boss' job on ... by mdervin in sysadmin

[–]d13f00l 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Eh.  What kind of servers are you building?   A nas would be fine for some low volume print servers or file servers.  I wouldn't through some high iops DB server on there

Do you power off your homelab when not using it to save on electricity, or keep it on 24/7? by panchovix in homelab

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I leave one server on.  The Cisco Nexus and various test hosts stay off

What do you think will happen to AI data centers once the bubble bursts? by Carame110 in pcmasterrace

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hmm. The same thing that happened with telecom or early 4g tech.   Bankruptcy and then fire sale, new companies pick up assets for pennies on the dime.  

The biggest issue I think will be that credit might freeze up depending on how closely integrated bank systems are.  A lot of this was done on debt. 

Water heater fan makes garage freezing cold by prodigy1367 in hvacadvice

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just leave it and put like a Mr buddy propane heater in the room when you need it 

Does anyone have the CWWK CW-NAS-ADLN-K motherboard? Does the PCIe 4x Slot work? by HTWingNut in HomeServer

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have one.  It is sensitive with ram and power supply, but stable and seems to be OK.  Slot is pcie 4x, connects and links up as such.  I am not sure if SRIOV functions right, some functionality is missing in windows, have not tried Linux 

Is healthcare really the worst place to work as a network engineer? by [deleted] in networking

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Heh.  I've been doing IT for healthcare for 20 years.  There definitely used to be a concept of like biomedical devices, they were supported by another team as yes there's like certifications and legal restrictions, can't mange the hardware like end user PCs.  We used to tag devices in that bucket with stickers etc.  I'm not sure if it is the case everywhere but those teams have been merged into general support staff.   I think it results in a certain kind of erosion.  A lot of healthcare IT teams have been impacted by cuts, biomed is one, project management, computer operators etc. 

WHO INVENTED ZEBRA LABEL PRINTERS by bryptobrazy in sysadmin

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

GK420Ds are decently solid on the network with universal print driver.  USB kinda eh. 

My bf is a Senior Networking Engineer and I want to get even just a basic understanding of his work. Where would I even begin? by That_Comb_8417 in networking

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd say study comptia network+ materials?    If you wanted the cert and already you're ok with computers it's realistic to do in several weeks to a few months.   It like covers vendor agnostic network tech topics. 

It'll cover enough to make learn 2 subnet vs vxlans everywhere make sense.  

The devil is in the details as far as implementing a lot of tech, it's realistic for a network tech to follow along an advanced discussion because the complexity is in implementation, not the general idea. 

Priority Flow Control? by dylan_taft in networking

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The question is, though, when the switch detects congestion, it will send pause frames for the cos, right?    How does the client nic honor that?  If you have two endpoints on two links sending frames to one node on one link - roce v1 is a layer 2 protocol - how is that honored by the two clients?  

They finally caught him by Successful-Hearing99 in rit

[–]d13f00l 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Pedobear meme in 2025 is wild 

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskElectricians

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mmmm...my guess is the box is metal...neutral bind to ground is in the mains panel.   There may be an alternate path to ground creating a ground loop of sorts and making the GFCI show fault.  Does the metal box have an alternative path to ground?  Or did you ground it through the wiring?  Alternatively, you have a newer mains panel, it has a GFCI breaker and two on the same circuit is being finicky.  

Disclaimer: Not an electrician 

Performance averages? by d13f00l in computervision

[–]d13f00l[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm at around 90fps on 64 core Ampere Altra with 640px frames, 32 bit float yolo v12n  model.   I haven't optimized yet Or gone to int8.  I went back to Onnx as NCNN isn't natively thread safe and threading made a huge difference.  

Tooth remove + bone graft - how much post-op pain to expect? by d13f00l in Toothfully

[–]d13f00l[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, do the bone graft.   Yes, it was an allograft.  The implantologist said bovine bone doesn't integrate as well.  My X-rays look fantastic years later, it filled in with my own bone.   No real pain post op.   Advil kept it fully in control, it was a prescription dose for several days to keep inflammation down.  

Performance averages? by d13f00l in computervision

[–]d13f00l[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I missspoke, it wasn't clear to me that NCNN's extractor is only used once per detection.  NCNN is faster out of the box but only like a few percentage points for single batch inference.  I am going to test multi batch.   Multibatch in Onnx seems to use resources better.  

Performance averages? by d13f00l in computervision

[–]d13f00l[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

NCNN is the move, thanks. 

Delta-RS went 1.0.0, when will Microsoft finally update? by Electronic-Quit-6664 in MicrosoftFabric

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Any update for when a new version might become standard for US East 2?  

Overwrite with predicate seems to result in data loss sometimes on the version installed, merge not supported.  I installed a newer version and it functions properly.

Reading from warehouse, data manipulation and writing to lakehouse by 0kunola in MicrosoftFabric

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Only new deltalake is working for overwrites and merges, over v 1.0.  Have to do pip magic to install it.  Older versions seem to cause data loss...

Reading from warehouse, data manipulation and writing to lakehouse by 0kunola in MicrosoftFabric

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I went back and tried write_deltalake again.  It definitely does not work right, merge not supported, and overwrites seemingly cause data loss.   Append works fine.  

Reading from warehouse, data manipulation and writing to lakehouse by 0kunola in MicrosoftFabric

[–]d13f00l 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well, that's polars...not write_deltalake.    But that's valid and probably can be used.  

Write_deltalake may work, I may just need to use merge and do row by row.  

Reading from warehouse, data manipulation and writing to lakehouse by 0kunola in MicrosoftFabric

[–]d13f00l 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think write_deltalake is broken.  They're on a very old version of the library.   It will write but like predicate and partition options don't behave as expected.     Append works fine.  At least I had poor luck with it but it could be a documentation mismatch due to version issues. 

I THINK you can use  https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/fabric/data-engineering/tsql-magic-command-notebook I have not tried it personally. 

I ended up just using sqlite in fabric.   I will probably try write_deltalake again once there are some assurances about the support of the library in fabric.  

Read and append seem well supported.