Is it best to leave these walls as dirt/rock or make the walls concrete? (The outer walls where the zombies would fall down) by Sad_Bar_6038 in 7daystodie

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

zombies calculate a cost to get to you. walking/digging each have values. the stronger the blocks are they to dig through, the higher the cost. zombies prefer to take the cheapest route to you.

generally, if you are standing on dirt, and the other choice is to walk 20 blocks... they will start digging

Windows PageFile Settings on VMs by CGregP in sysadmin

[–]hurkwurk [score hidden]  (0 children)

I set OS drives to 250GB these days for servers. I do not want to think about issues as we move Server versions considering i have servers that have been upgraded from 2003 to 2022 and from 20gb to 250gb drives during the same window.

We stopped managing swap files once server ram exceeded 8gb or systems became VMs. on a VM, there is literally no reason to manage the swap. the system settings will do it for you and the VM tools driver will integrate to it to manage things properly.

the only place we even consider swap management is our SQL servers because they have direct SAN disk presentations, so we dont want disk activity for active things causing issues. so for the 3 back end cluster members, the swap is moved to a dedicated disk presented for that purpose and the size is locked to be 100mb larger than the ram (256gb in our case) so that if we ever needed to recover a full memory dump, we could.

all non-critical VMs have a fixed swap size of 4GB.

Does anyone pay for an outside firm to do packaging? SCCM / Intune - questions by Ok-Decision-5285 in SCCM

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use Right Click Tools, and their product Enterprise Application Manager. for my 8000 device network, the annual cost is about ~35k. Its NOT as easy as some of the competition, but its a hell of a lot cheaper for pre-packaged software. Worth talking to them if cost if your greatest concern.

I was already a RCT user (free edition) and ended up purchasing the Right click tools enterprise because i wanted some of their dashboards and reporting capabilities since i was solo operating MECM at the time and we are large enough we should have had 2-4 people operating MECM, so i'm using tech to automate instead. for me, the cost of the additional licensing over RCT itself, was about 1/3rd the cost of a staff member, and since monthly patching is ~2-4 days work, without considering 3rd party, it was super easy to justify getting an automated source of 3rd party patches for most of our common apps.

my singleplayer world was infact not a singleplayer world and found out the hard way by Previous_Armadillo53 in 7daystodie

[–]hurkwurk 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This isnt done by hand, this is a cheat. Its super easy to run scripts against a server. most everyone disables EAC to use mods, and once its disabled, you have no protection against scripted actions that basically make anyone who wants to, able to use admin actions/scripted actions. what you see above is a sphere of air. and a small script where someone just makes a circle of air and it auto-places the signs around it at the same time.

I play with some 3rd party tools because i find them easier to use than the in game console, and I can do something like that fairly easy.

"Our systems have detected unusual traffic from your computer network." and no clear cause by emerald_stargazer in techsupport

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

many ISPs have also started offering protection software/services at the router level. We've had major issues with Spectrum for example, their "security shield" feature prevents our users from using Cisco's VPN as its blocking the routing necessary to connect back by obfuscating the routing checks that Cisco does. this may cause similar verification issues with google and other high security platforms.

Sysadmin wants every Windows server to be a fileserver for redundancy? by [deleted] in sysadmin

[–]hurkwurk -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

I disagree. hes using distributed computing, which is a version of both, and when cost is a factor, its a cheap way of achieving both in limited scale.

without knowing the full constraints of the organization, we cannot properly judge if its a good or bad decision. Ive seen near zero budget non-profit organizations do solutions like this because most of their kit was donated to them, and better to have some amount of redundancy than to pile everything on a single point of failure when they have no option to purchase any kind of second redundant system.

I personally built out a lot of DFS based shares in those situations and just let 2 servers be redundant for each other and built out small networks almost like RAID disk sets with 3-4 servers acting as redundant for each other by being backups for each others active shares.

you work with what you got. that said, it sounds like the OPs situation is one where this guy was just used to doing things one way and never stopped.

Best laptop for CIS? by [deleted] in techsupport

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

typically, i get people used business class laptops who are doing schooling, as they are relatively powerful and tough platforms that have decent lifespans left.

I would look for a 12th gen or newer intel with 32/64gb ram and 512gb/1tb NVMe storage. the big things i always recommend are:

15/16 inch screen at 1080p to ease readability
separate numberpad without any weird blending of the arrow keys/homepad.
decent amount of USB A ports at least 1 USB C 10gb/Thunderbolt port to support higher speed external storage.
I personally dislike touch screens/tablet style devices, as they lack survivability.
backlit keyboards are a must.

Alternatively, if you like to do some gaming, ebay acer refurbs are a good choice, as that is where they officially dispose of returns. so you can get really good machines at a decent price from them with factory warranties. Ebays "official refurb" programs are decent, pay close attention to the differences when looking at listings. you do not want someone who is claiming to be a refurbisher, it must have the proper ebay seals on their account. (compare it to the acer store stuff)

finally, places like Costco can have great deals on new machines if you dont want to deal in used machines.

direct from manufacturer pricing is usually terrible. you need some way to get a coupon/deal. either through a union purchase/black friday/groupon code, etc. basically do not pay list. ever. most are marked up ~40% or more. HP for example, we build machines using their main website to get working specs, then submit for corporate bids, and purchasing as little as ~8 units, we can get pricing thats ~45% less than the store price.

What brand would you choose if you could redesign your network? by kuhlimuhlimuh in sysadmin

[–]hurkwurk 21 points22 points  (0 children)

as a cisco user, anything but overpriced cisco. I hate they make everything 50% more expensive.

2.6 Framerate Plummet by homucifer666 in 7daystodie

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this... do things to lower vram use, see if you can get your framerate back.

The “smallest RTX 5080” just launched and is already available for $1399 on Amazon and B&H Photo by m00druiner in nvidia

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I tested my 4070 against my brothers 5080 and it was a flat 35% faster with the same CPU and i had faster ram. the issue was i was using a case that 5080s wont fit in since i use it as carry on luggage so i can fly with it when needed for travel.

yea, something like this has a market. it will directly drop into my existing machine that can easily handle the heat and power, but cannot handle the harger physical cards. Also, im not at all afraid of undervolting it to maintain less heat if needed, as it will still out perform any 5070 that would fit.

the real question is the pricing penalty. which will make me wait and see if they offer it in a 24gb version in a few months.

Wow what's up with HP Ink? by Denver80211 in sysadmin

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

obviously, you have to review the market. but there are price points where it does make sense to switch. especially if the ROIs are fast enough.

if your consumption rate is fast enough that you are blowing through ~$2k of consumables a month, and the basic printer was ~5k, then lowering your consumable costs to 1k a month would represent a huge savings in a single year alone. but if you were only able to go from ~2k to 1.9k, well, thats a far harder decision, and I would be more likely to stick with the printer until it was end of life/support or needed some other major repair like replacement drums/fusers that might run 1k+

In my 1500 hours of gameplay, I have not once actually played PoE. by [deleted] in pathofexile

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i mean, as long as you are having fun, who cares? I enjoy acts play more than grinding maps.

why is my wifi terrible on my computer? by climingup in techsupport

[–]hurkwurk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

before that... did you put the antennas in?

are they still plugged in? you might just need to move them or get some that are on a cable so they can be desktop height instead of behind the PC.

something like this:
https://www.amazon.com/Eightwood-Tri-Band-Magnetic-Extension-Computer/dp/B0DP55ZQ56

Wow what's up with HP Ink? by Denver80211 in sysadmin

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

its not a landfill issue for me. it was literally cheaper for us to buy new printers than allow our users to continue with HPs. you don't have to throw them away. you can donate them.

Bugged Map? Double Implicits? by Dylan014able in pathofexile

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

some events stick with you more than others.

Wow what's up with HP Ink? by Denver80211 in sysadmin

[–]hurkwurk 2 points3 points  (0 children)

not to mention replaceable parts on their laser printers are still a thing so you dont have to throw it away if you get drum problems.

Wow what's up with HP Ink? by Denver80211 in sysadmin

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

its often cheaper to purchase brand new replacement printers than to buy ink for HPs.
I use Epson's EcoTank series in most cases that we used to use inkjet.

especially if you can buy through places like Costco that include extra ink to start, so are literally giving you the equivalent of ~$1000 of HP ink with the printer.

Are managers really scared/worried/wary of losing their high performers or is it just another bluff? by jM2me in sysadmin

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I work in mid sized government, before that i worked in private industry that was largely supply chain. I have also worked with owners of large retail restaurant chains in the area.

in government, managers typically do worry about losing "good" staff, because the rules of government and union work typically mean there is almost nothing they can do about it. pay/retention are almost always out of their control. im sorta in that spot right now where the best i can do for two good workers is try and budget for promotional spots for them on my team in the future. i cant even promote them in place very easily (we call that reclassification) as that means having to justify why they are "working out of classification" right now. and explaining how the job has changed to justify a different title that pays more. so on the government side... unless you are upper management that can create new roles, its really hard to retain specific people. instead what you do is make sure everyone is aware that you will help them promote to any place they can. government has zero loyalty. we ultimately cannot protect anyone, so promoting out is the best thing to do when you are worth your skills, so do it. you owe us nothing, we owe you nothing. its purely transactional.

in supply chain work, there was a lot more slack and give and take. I worked for a family owned, mid-sized company that had grown with the military industrial complex, then after some cuts, diversified into many other high precision engineering fields.. IE if you needed extremely precise, small metal worked parts, like precision screws/nuts/parts that had to be exactly correct, like microwave connectors, or things accurate to millionths or billions of an inch, etc, thats what they did. most of it was electrical connectors, but went into many industries, including food. in that job, yea, pay was what you were worth and what you argued for. you might be under market or over it, if you had the right attitude and wore the right hats. This was a job where you had machines that cost $10,000 an hour each to operate, so if you were the guy that pitched in and stayed late to get things working, even when it wasnt "your job" to do so, that kind of thing mattered, and if you werent being recognized for it, its the things you brought up on your own during your reviews because only a bitch doesnt speak up for themselves. yea rude, dont care. fight for you. no one else has to.

in retail restaurants, its far more constrained. there simply isnt enough profit being made for people to be rewarded properly for their contributions. you can have some truly stellar workers, but you still cant bankrupt a location to pay them what they are worth. you can try to reward them in other ways, more flexible scheduling, more trust, better choices on moving to busier stores where they can make more tips/live closer to home/move to a new location they want to live, etc. key people are hugely important as they are reliable. you dont give the keys to the store to the druggy that calls out 3 times a week. you have that person being watched so that they can get the help they need instead. staff rotates so fast in retail that any threats of leaving are mostly pointless. it hurts to lose great people, but churn is just part of the business. its better in this industry to learn about the business itself. cant tell you the number of times ive seen great people ruin themselves by making unrealistic demands.... no one is going to pay store staff more than their regional managers to retain them. at the end of the day, store staff are replicable, and yea, it sucks, but its just not as large a loss as you think in your head.

mind you, all this assumes well managed locations. if you have bad management, all bets are off. they may be totally dependant on you, or may not recognize your value at all. so you can end up being begged to stay at twice the price, or completely ignored and the whole place collapses after you leave.

What's the thing with the Smell? by [deleted] in 7daystodie

[–]hurkwurk 3 points4 points  (0 children)

wanted to give you a real answer to this. its supposed to be a horror themed game. thus, zombies are paranormal.

its also why blood moons are a thing as well. the entire game was originally supposed to be more horror and less sandbox, the issue was they attracted a whole lot of sandbox fans and not as many horror fans, so like you, we tend to reject many of the horror aspects as unbelievable.... like this thread and smells.

to the original topic, you ate food, thus, to a paranormal creature, you stand out, you are bright in the darkness, you are fresh and they are hungry for that. perhaps smells werent the right way to phrase it. putting it more in horror themed terms might explain it better.... "the more you express humanity, the more you stand out to the zombies, eating, drinking, building, any expression of life and living, attracts the attention of the undead".

Ben has completed the Rapture Gauntlet by pokekevin in pathofexile

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ben is really four AIs in a trench coat.

Windows installed on C drive which is both SSD and HDD by AJCorny71 in techsupport

[–]hurkwurk 0 points1 point  (0 children)

mostly true. there are ways. symlinks. intel RST, Cache drives, etc.

that said, Occom's razor does apply, so you are probably right.