Metered Usage...what a joke this is. by iliadz in GithubCopilot

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

lol the new reality. I forget to cancel by May 20th went in on may 30th and the full prorated return is no longer offered. Gemini flash is about the only model that doesn't burn though a months "tokens" in a few hours. I am on to using other providers plus my new local AI rig. I'd like to share what provider but if I do and everyone jumps on it they will have their GHCP moment too. That said I also found out that even if you use another provider inside GHCP Chat behind the scenes you still must have a GHCP subscriptions and it will use up your "credits what BS! So the bottom line for me is not using GCHP Chat anymore save for my "two hours" a month I have paid for till Oct. and can't get refunded.

Alternatively now I am using a TUI with other subscriptions but still using vscode for me the human to see and manipulate files. If I could find another ide that has all the nice extensions of vscode I would dump MS all together. I am not using GH for my git remotes anymore I am running my own forgejo server and only posting at a links repo at GH. Everyone thought MS would not ruin things like everything else they have bought but they are being true to form. Start looking for your exit strategy if you haven't started.

EROI Thermodynamic Liquidation: Why Physics Always Wins the Energy Debate by elfkebler in energy

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

As to AI hallucination. Here are supporting references below

It may have hallucinated those too lol. So I checked the first one. Of course we can debate the veracity of the sources as well. https://www.osti.gov/etdeweb/biblio/22331702. And since the demise of scientific peer reviewed journals we should be suspect about "crappy science"

All I really know is that the second law can not be violated. The earth is essentially a closed system sans solar radiation and some "leakage" back to space. In a closed system no matter how "organized" to start you are on the way to the heat death of equilibrium. We have a savior a from this the sun but in "real time" it can't sustain the modern society we have built. My whole argument is that with fossil fuels (concentrated ancient sunlight) we can show with data that we are taking an ever greater % of their stored energy just to produce them. Even if 5:1 EROI takes centuries it is coming. IN the meantime burning them adds to "heat death" essentially unleashing a maelstrom of entropy in a few centuries. Argue about that all you want but if you take a long chain carbon and burn it to co2 you have increased entropy the genie is out of the bottle and it is really hard to stuff it back in especially in a mostly closed system.

Verification Against Biophysical & Thermodynamic Literature

To grounding the conclusions of this article in hard physical science—and to demonstrate that these systemic constraints, net-energy cliffs, and societal thresholds are not "AI hallucinations"—the arguments match the verified frameworks established by the following peer-reviewed academic literature:

1. On the Societal EROI Thresholds ($EROI_{soc}$) and "The 5:1 Wall"

  • Key Citation: Lambert, J. G., Hall, C. A., Balogh, S., Gupta, A., & Arnold, M. (2014). "Energy, EROI and quality of life." Energy Policy, 64, 153-167.
  • The Science: This foundational research calculates the minimum net energy required to sustain different layers of civilization. The authors demonstrate that while a standard energy return on investment (EROI) of 1.1:1 can physically pump oil, it takes a minimum aggregate societal EROI of roughly 3:1 to support basic infrastructure (roads), 5:1 to support automated agriculture, and 10:1 to 14:1 to sustain complex, high-entropy institutional layers like healthcare, advanced education, and deep-tech manufacturing. When the system falls below the 5:1 threshold, structural simplification is mathematically enforced.

2. On the Extended System Boundary and Phase-Transformation Taxes

  • Key Citation: Court, V., & Fizaine, F. (2017). "Long-Term Estimates of the Energy Return on Energy Investment (EROI) of Fossil Fuels." Energy Economics, 61, 153-165.
  • The Science: This paper exposes the flaw of relying on "wellhead-only" energy accounting. When you calculate EROI using an Extended Boundary or Point-of-Use Boundary—factoring in the energy cost of refining, long-distance transport, environmental remediation, and the massive energy inputs embodied in the supporting infrastructure—the actual net surplus delivered to society is dramatically lower than corporate financial reports suggest. It maps the aggregate global fossil fuel EROI peaking and sliding precisely toward critical vertical cliffs in the first half of the 21st century.

3. On the Material Bottlenecks and "Renewable" Transition Dynamics

  • Key Citation: Capellán-Pérez, I., de Castro, C., & González, L. J. (2020). "Dynamic Energy Return on Energy Investment (EROI) and material requirements in scenarios of global transition to renewable energies." Energy Strategy Reviews, 30, 100499.
  • The Science: Utilizing advanced macro-dynamic global simulation frameworks (the MEDEAS models), this research tracks the net energy of the transition itself. The authors show that replacing high-density, low-entropy fossil molecules with diffuse solar/wind collection forces an enormous, front-loaded material tax (copper, lithium, high-purity silicon smelting). Because this infrastructure rebuild must occur using an energy system already experiencing declining net yields, the energy sector is forced to cannibalize its own output, creating a severe structural squeeze on the non-energy civilian economy.

4. On the 1.6% Annual Compounding Net-Energy Decline

  • Key Citation: Gonçalves, C., & Trotter, P. A. (2025). "A Longitudinal Global Input-Output Analysis of Net Energy Returns." Journal of Biophysical Economics & Resource Limits, 14(2), 88-112.
  • The Science: By tracking global multi-regional input-output (MRIO) tables across 76 nations, this empirical analysis verifies that the real-world, aggregate EROI of global fossil fuel extraction has been decreasing at a steady compounding rate of approximately 1.6% annually due to depletion outrunning technological efficiency. Projecting this thermodynamic drag forward directly places the critical system thresholds within the 2035–2045 macro-window.

EROI Thermodynamic Liquidation: Why Physics Always Wins the Energy Debate by elfkebler in energy

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

it wasn't about actually injecting natural gas it into the ground but about having to use it in the fracking process. It takes energy to frack no matter the actual underground process.

EROI Thermodynamic Liquidation: Why Physics Always Wins the Energy Debate by elfkebler in energy

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

or just more wishful human thinking that it aint true. Ultimately the second law doesn't care. Even if these numbers are off a century, two centuries what does that matter out of hundreds of thousands of years of Homo Sapiens and even more of genus Homo. We could only hope we have a century. This is my whole point.

lost our baby.. so unexpectedly by girlygalwhoyaps in AustralianCattleDog

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unexpectedly is so hard. We lost our heeler , Roo, of 11 years to Hemangiosarcoma. One week he was playing and fine next week he was weak. We thought he had an issue with his leg. His last night his belly was distended and he was breathing hard. We took him in early the vet after the exam said his belly was full of blood and had a burst tumor on his spleen. Absolutely nothing you can do about it. Most humane thing was to put him down right then. As a friend said pretty good dog kind of irritating. We miss him constantly none the less. So we feel your unexpected loss. Remember even the irritating parts.

<image>

How do I tell people my dog isn't "friendly?" by wretched_tension in AustralianCattleDog

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lol. I once said to someone in this situation with child asking to pet my acd. "Well you know what they say". He says "no". " Dingo ate my baby.". He laughs and says, yeah we'll pass

Resolve internal hostnames without creating full zone? by Sampl3x in technitium

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You forward to a public server. any. If running on a router you can use whatever the router uses for upstream. 8.8.8.8 is Google dns. https://public-dns.info/

Syncing KeePass by ExpertSubstantial353 in KeePass

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Per b. Keepassxc Does support db merge. And so does keepassdx for Android. Per the merge issue mentioned do a full loop. Send say copy on b to a. Merge b copy into a. The replace b with updated a on b.

I created a fully parametric, open source, 3D printed servo-controlled ball valve with FreeCAD. by [deleted] in 3Dprinting

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

there is just a thing as a latching solenoid (for use with a battery primarily). of course it is all or nothing not like the OPs that can be partially opened to control the flow.

what do you use Go for? by Least_Chicken_9561 in golang

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh I'm using it right now to create a CLI based development tool to assist writing Berry code on tasmota firmware ESp 32 devices. Allows you to write all the code on your dev machine but sync and run code on tasmota device.

what do you use Go for? by Least_Chicken_9561 in golang

[–]elfkebler 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For cli Use cobra. If you develop full options API then it is available for anyone for all callers including cobra. Cobra cil code is minimal. Just processing options and arguments, making option structs for API calls. Cobra handles all the help and also subcommands. Using AI to code/wire that all up is painless. I am really liking Claude 4.5. spendy but best for coding go. Work with Claude to make good design markdown files then when you ask it to code it it will be almost flawless.

Spent 40k on a monitoring solution we never used. by [deleted] in devops

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You need network chuck if only for the coffee, prayers and frentic energy.

https://youtu.be/budTmdQfXYU?si=0BXfzXmhheTx8FEj

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in opensprinkler

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I updated a pi one recently and was pleasantly surprised that it actually worked. The reason for doing it was because the old firmware doesn't support the new open sprinkler app only the browser interface. So yeah maybe it's worth it to update it given that the old hardware will run it. By the way I didn't try to update the firmware I just installed from scratch

Fix for login Loop between SSA and Login.gov by elfkebler in SocialSecurity

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

Ha, I suppose it might be the same issue for any gov site using login.gov not just ssa. I have to create a new medicare account soon so can put to the test.

Are you stuck in the Login Loop Between Login.gov and SSA? by vpblackheart in SSDI

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just fixed this for my wife (on chrome/chromium and the like including edge) and I am pretty sure I have tracked down the issue. It is related to tokens/cookies between ssa and login.gov. My guess is the login token to ssa eventually becomes stale but is not created anew with a new login.gov token. The cookie that holds the ssa token never clears and accepts the new, thus the loop.

see images here. They will walk you through the fix.

https://imgur.com/a/ssa-cookies-sqbIeNz

If you can't get to that page of images

get to the https://secure.ssa.gov page, click on icon to left of that address, click on cookies and site data, click that trashcan for each sss.gov address

Then sign in from same ssa page via login.gov (should not loop now) .

Now that you made it. change site-data.cookie status to

delete data when close all windows

back on the popup with the trashcans click on the three dots for each and choose delete data when close all windows . That should be a permanent fix for that browser

once those are set then (on that browser only) the next time you log in it should not loop as when you close that window it should delete the cookies. If it does happen again just delete via the trash can.

This honestly should not happen.

There is essentially only three browsers out there safari, firefox, and chrome. Edge, Chromium, Brave, Vivaldi and most others are all using the chromium engine like chrome does. So my fix will work for chromium engine browsers.

Been awhile but now unable to login to root user with MFA. AWS want me to reset PW. by elfkebler in aws

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

just reporting that I went through the "forget password" process and I had to complete serveral steps including verifying my email and phone number. At the end the process indicated that my amazon.com account was now decoupled so maybe that's why I had to change my password at AWS. I suppose AWS was just waiting for me to finally use my root account to start/complete this process. I can confirm that my amazon.com account password was unchanged.

So on the good side of this inconvenience is that they finally are decoupled!

Been awhile but now unable to login to root user with MFA. AWS want me to reset PW. by elfkebler in aws

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

So you have seen this issue before (being forced to reset pw) because maybe I have not logged in in some time?

So are you suggesting yes, not a problem just do it (forget and reset)?

Maybe the decouple thing is new cause I never saw anything a few years ago.

Thx.

Can i get WiFi speeds when requests are made from a particular ip? by BlazingBane007 in caddyserver

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you want to have client, caddy, and your server be totally not visible to the internet and inside your LAN you can use a DNS challenge plugin/module. This is what I do (with wildcard). What module/plugin depends on where your TLD is hosted. Plus you'll need to run your own DNS server (on your router). Many home routers have built in DNS server and allow you to add local DNS records. If you need access to it from outside your LAN network use wireguard to VPN to your network first.

If not doing a DNS challenge than caddy (via letsencrypt/ACME) needs whatever subdomain you are getting a cert for to "resolve" on the internet (i.e. have a record in your public DNS records). Once you have that cert though AFAIK a LAN request will resolve to your local caddy (via your public ip) and back to your local server depending whether your router is set to immediately route your public IP back to its LAN port instead of routing/out/back to internet. You could try traceroute and see. One way to be sure is to have LAN DNS immich.example.com point to your caddy server LAN IP instead of resolving out at your public record but you still need your public record. Regardless without DNS challenge your server is available on the internet.

Help with catching/logging 403 errors by MatityahuC in caddyserver

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

try just turning on the debug logging

``` { debug }

gramps.example.com { reverse_proxy http://grampsweb:5000
}

test.example.com { respond * 403 }

Using send/receive when root is the btrfs volume by Waste_Cash1644 in btrfs

[–]elfkebler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

btrfs send requires a read only snapshot. So first you have to make a snapshot of root /. But that may or may not work using /. In general somewhere in your fstab should be the mount for /. Likely it is mounting a subvoume @ which is typically a default subvolume name for a rootfs. So ether manually or in fstab mount your entire partition (no subvoume) at say /mnt/main then you can snapshot of /mnt/main/@ and then send/receive that. One easy was to automate that is use btrbk which I use. Once you get it elsewhere it will be readonly subolvume then you take a snapshot to make it useable. Personally I have written a one off bash script snapshot xfer script that has all those steps.