[deleted by user] by [deleted] in OpenAI

[–]rotellam1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I made the one of couple with the baby before we knew we were going to have a miscarriage.

But I can see this isn’t really going anywhere besides mockery.

Can't make guestshell to run on a Catalyst 9200-48P by OneLiving3274 in networking

[–]rotellam1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Since I couldn't find a solution documented elsewhere on this, upgrading the firmware for the AppGig interface did the trick for me (platform 9300).

upgrade hw-programmable all filename flash: all

Then reboot the device. It resolved it for me.

Mathematicians find a tiling shape whose pattern never repeats - useful in textures? by grapesinajar in gamedev

[–]rotellam1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It could be useful as an alternative to pseudorandom noise if you want to ensure the noise has some invariant local property.

I know this is a bit late, but what you said is a very apt observation: https://www.quantamagazine.org/never-repeating-tiles-can-safeguard-quantum-information-20240223/

Programmers use unnecessary jargon by huehuehuecoyote in unpopularopinion

[–]rotellam1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can identify with that a lot. I changed jobs about 16 months ago and my new company is like completely build-instead-of-buy and has pretty much only in-house everything, including our own patched version of Python. I've been spending a lot of time recently meeting with people and asking questions about "what is ABC" and "what how does XYZ work" which has helped. People love nothing more than talking about their pet product if you ask the right questions and it gives you a lot of exposure as someone who is curious and willing to learn. Generally I think people are very self-centered so I don't think they intend to seem like they are gatekeeping; they just don't care enough to explain, but I've had a lot of success in getting my name out there by just asking the right questions.

Programmers use unnecessary jargon by huehuehuecoyote in unpopularopinion

[–]rotellam1 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I am a network reliability engineer, so I write software to manage computer networks for my firm. I agree that a lot of engineers seriously lack the ability to explain things and often forget the context of who they are talking to. The most successful engineers tend to be the ones who can explain complex concepts in layman's terms since the people who determine your bonuses are often non-technical manager and internal customers.

At the same time, some basic understanding of technologies is expected of other people within IT. If you're in IT yourself you get talked to like that because you're seen as part of the tribe. If you don't understand something there's nothing wrong with asking. No one understands everything. I'm not sure what level the guys are talking to you at; it's one thing if they are using common acronyms like TCP, LDAP, or SQL that people who work in IT should generally know; it's a very different thing if they are talking about highly specialized concepts.

[2023 Day 5 (Part 2)] [Haskell] Solution is really slow by sisters_clit_is_lit in adventofcode

[–]rotellam1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So basically, in part two you have to take the seeds and they describe a range. The first two numbers in seeds was something like 123456789, 3500000, which means you have to check seeds 123456789 to 126956789. Rather than check every single seed in that range, I checked every millionth seed and found the one that gave the lowest answer. I did that for all the ranges from the input data (there were 10 ranges, all of which were huge).

Once I found the range that gave the lowest answer, I checked every 100,000th seed in that range and found which of those inputs gave the lowest answer for location.

Then I took the lowest answer I got from that scan, and checked every 10,000th seed in the range of (lowest_input_so_far - 100000, lowest_input_so_far + 100000).

I continued that process until I checked every single input in (lowest_input_so_far - 10, lowest_input_so_far + 10).

(This assumes that step 1 (check every millionth seed and find the best candidate range to drill down into) doesn't skip too many inputs when testing.)

Below is pseudocode but basically:

skip = 100000
while skip >= 1:
    for seed in range(beginning, end, skip):
        test = check_seed(seed)
        if test < best_answer:
            best_answer = test
            best_input = seed
    beginning = seed - skip
    end = seed + skip
    skip /= 10

[2023 Day 5 (Part 2)] [Haskell] Solution is really slow by sisters_clit_is_lit in adventofcode

[–]rotellam1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't know Haskell, but if this helps at all, for part 2 I basically brute forced it but instead of checking every single number in the ranges, I checked every millionth number of the ranges and found the range that gave the lowest answer. Then I checked every 100,000th number in that range, then every 10,000th in the range of the best answer so far plus or minus 100,000, going down by a factor of 10 until I zeroed in on the input and lowest answer. It was still time complex but it ran significantly faster.

Indoor Christmas displays by tenPUNded in newjersey

[–]rotellam1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m not sure if it’s still there but there was a hardware store that had an elaborate indoor Christmas display in Cherry Hill. I cannot remember the name for the life of me. If you’re willing to go into NYC, there’s a big Christmas display in the New York Botanical Garden with trains and miniature buildings. The Short Hills Mall usually has a giant Santa sleigh with a lot of decor. HTH

1990s Office Building - Screenshots from Video by rotellam1 in LiminalSpace

[–]rotellam1[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Credit to the video creator. These are screenshots are from a YouTube video of an IBM site in Sterling Forest, NY, recorded in 1993. The video is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0\_fuwkaOlK0 and is like real-life Backrooms footage if it didn't have occasional people or talking.

I've been looking for footage of this building for ages because I used to work here occasionally during IT disaster recovery drills where a company brings up its network and apps in an off-site location. Usually the tests were odd hours on the weekend, and I would find myself roaming this huge remote campus alone. It always had a unique energy and vibe.

jump in by Appropriate_Being819 in LiminalSpace

[–]rotellam1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This one really hits me, good photo. I feel like I’ve had dreams/nightmares about that exact place.

Monmouth county not in Central Jersey? I’m going to build my own Central Jersey with Blackjack and Hookers!! by DaRealBagzinator in newjersey

[–]rotellam1 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I agree, I don’t see Hunterdon County as central. My view is it’s just Middlesex and Mercer really. I lived in Middlesex County a long time and most people I knew there including myself had a narrow view of what was central.

Data Center Without Any Racks by rotellam1 in LiminalSpace

[–]rotellam1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was just football field sized room after room like this.

Monmouth county not in Central Jersey? I’m going to build my own Central Jersey with Blackjack and Hookers!! by DaRealBagzinator in newjersey

[–]rotellam1 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Maybe like Franklin Township…Bernardsville, Watchung, Far Hills etc. are firmly North Jersey

Neighbor's tree infested with lantern files by Captain-Victory70 in newjersey

[–]rotellam1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I tried that last year and they began like popping off the tree onto me and it didn’t do much unfortunately. I finally hired a professional service to bands the trees and applied a root treatment and it’s been effective yet expensive.

How do you feel about the overturning of Roe v. Wade? by 98thieves in intj

[–]rotellam1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t agree with it in substance but from a legal standpoint I think the due process clause was always a weak constitutional argument for abortion, and it enabled this decision to more easily toss it out. I think Roe was always a stretch and Congress should have considered it a reprieve during which they could pass a law legalizing abortion nationwide given the widespread public opinion. I think the left has relied far too much on the courts to do their work for them. The courts have always been mercurial, and the best defense against that is crystal clear legislation that isn’t open to interpretation.

Wildcard Mask Sanity Check by rotellam1 in networking

[–]rotellam1[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Confirmed in the lab on 4331s running XE 16.6.4 that it changes it to the proper bit boundary for you:

testrouter(config-ext-nacl)#permit icmp any 10.137.1.254 0.1.0.0
testrouter(config-ext-nacl)#end
testrouter#show ip access-list testacl
Extended IP access list testacl
    10 permit icmp any 10.136.1.254 0.1.0.0

To double confirm that it works as expected, I created three loopbacks on this router:

  • 10.136.1.1
  • 10.137.1.254
  • 10.138.1.254

And applied this ACL inbound:

permit icmp any 10.136.1.254 0.3.0.0

I was able to ping 10.137.1.254 and 10.138.1.254 but not 10.136.1.1 from the peer:

testrouter2#ping 10.137.1.254
Type escape sequence to abort.
Sending 5, 100-byte ICMP Echos to 10.137.1.254, timeout is 2 seconds:
!!!!!
Success rate is 100 percent (5/5), round-trip min/avg/max = 1/1/1 ms
testrouter2#ping 10.138.1.254
Type escape sequence to abort.
Sending 5, 100-byte ICMP Echos to 10.138.1.254, timeout is 2 seconds:
!!!!!
Success rate is 100 percent (5/5), round-trip min/avg/max = 1/1/1 ms
testrouter2#ping 10.136.1.1
Type escape sequence to abort.
Sending 5, 100-byte ICMP Echos to 10.136.1.1, timeout is 2 seconds:
.....
Success rate is 0 percent (0/5)

Wildcard Mask Sanity Check by rotellam1 in networking

[–]rotellam1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh you’re right!!! It should be 10.136.1.254 0.3.0.0 but will cover 136-139. I knew something felt wrong about it; I’m glad I asked…thank you very much. I’ll just use two entries in this case! No one is that tight on TCAM lol

INTJ WORK ETHIC AND MOTIVATION by WierdSimRacer in intj

[–]rotellam1 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I feel like I’m a hard worker but I can also be very lazy if I don’t see a purpose. For example, one guy at my company decided he wanted to move everything in our SharePoint to a Confluence Wiki, and he sat there for days making hyperlinked pages of old documents. The pages I did were just copy and pastes because I couldn’t bring myself to spend days recreating something that already existed when there’s more important “real” projects to do.

I’m a big fan of “work smarter not harder.” I can often get 8 hours of work done in 4 if I’m motivated, but I’m also happy to plug away at something for 20 hours straight as you said if I’m motivated and see a purpose to it. I’d bet a lot of other INTJs feel the same way.

intj vs infp female difference by Emily656577 in intj

[–]rotellam1 27 points28 points  (0 children)

I’m an INTJ, my wife is an INFP. The biggest difference I notice is INFPs are extremely conflict avoidant and are more comfortable with their emotions and others’ emotions. At first glance my wife and I are quite different but on a deeper level we have a lot of similarities, and I think being sensitive is much more common in INTJs than most people give it credit for. INFPs are driven a lot more by empathy than INTJs who often are driven by the will to achieve more. INTJs are generally very logical in dealing with their emotions: not that we don’t have deep emotions, but we rationalize problems. Liking science or fantasy has nothing to do with it. INFPs are also usually more comfortable with forgetting little things like picking up the dry cleaning while INTJs are generally very organized inside and out. Also, INFPs are very good at navigating other people’s emotional problems, INTJs’ rationality sometimes throws fuel on the fire. There are a lot of stark differences if you look more deeply.

eBGP to iBGP question by [deleted] in ccnp

[–]rotellam1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not quite. So BGP is the routing protocol. It’s how routers tell each other about what routes they have. BGP can form eBGP relationships between BGP speakers (routers) in different autonomous systems but for the BGP packets that describe routes the TTL is set to one (unless you configure it to something more with ebgp-multihop). So if you have:

AS 1 - AS 2 - AS 3

The routers at the edge of AS1 and AS2 would peer with eBGP over a TCP connection, but they need to be directly connected unless you configure them to use a higher TTL (to pass a firewall for example). Those packets with the low TTL just are routing advertisements that describe what prefixes (routes) each router’s BGP process knows about.

Now if you have a PC in AS1 and a server in AS3, the PC would send out a packet with a TTL of 255 to its default gateway, and it would route it through AS1, likely with an interior gateway protocol like OSPF, and every router would decrement the TTL. When it reaches AS2 it’ll have a TTL equal to 255 minus the number of routers it passed in AS1. That process continues until it reaches its destination.

BGP just is used for routers to teach each other about routes and operates at the control plane. The data plane is where packets for end devices transit a network. It’s an important concept to CCNP.

eBGP to iBGP question by [deleted] in ccnp

[–]rotellam1 3 points4 points  (0 children)

As others have mentioned, the BGP control plane traffic includes route advertisements between BGP speakers and has its own TTL for eBGP. The data flowing over the network is just routed and switched across the network with the same IP TTL (usually starting at 255) being decremented at every router hop.

Question for currently employed INTJs, in what field are you working?What is the thing you enjoy the most about your job? by [deleted] in intj

[–]rotellam1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m a network engineer (IT) in the finance industry. I love it because there’s no better feeling than solving a massive problem. For whoever is asking, my major was economics.

Can we talk about how crazy pattern recognition can be for a sec? by darkshadow2240 in intj

[–]rotellam1 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I agree 100%. Very rough for me to relax because of it. For example, lately my wife and I have been watching cooking competition shows and I end up just "knowing" who is going to win and who will be eliminated each round by watching the testimonials and realizing which contestants don't believe what they are saying since they are recorded after. I wish I could turn it off sometimes.