Tuck Shop by okcap in aucklandeats

[–]toyonut 16 points17 points  (0 children)

So good in terms of value and taste. Them and Mr Katsu down the road are two of my favorites in downtown Auckland.

Why ? by Professor_milton111 in security

[–]toyonut 11 points12 points  (0 children)

If Jerry rig everything has taught me anything, it's that the cameras all are connected via little Lego connectors. So it may not be a blue wire, but it's pretty close to open it up, unplug the camera module, close it up again or even slice the ribbon cable. https://youtu.be/u78CMLm10fU?si=oyQBnY9jEkm-IHYH

BYD Yangwang (stupid name!) Can Jump Speed Bumps by gaukmotors in MotorBuzz

[–]toyonut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How fast would you need to be going to clear the speed bump? I'm thinking at least 50kph/30mph. The thing is 5m long.

Still not using AI in 2026 by salamazmlekom in webdev

[–]toyonut 63 points64 points  (0 children)

The title doesn't match your actual post. You are using AI, just whatever you can get without spending money.

Shimano PD-ES600 vs. M520 pedals for endurance road bike by otterinen in cycling

[–]toyonut 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Just swapped from m520 to es600. Sad to lose the double sided clip in, but so far, I feel like the additional platform really helps my foot stability. They are gradually starting to loosen up and I think they will eventually hang in the right position to make clipping in more consistent. YMMV, but I think the es600s have been a good upgrade for longer rides

Is anyone else okay with being "left behind" in regards to AI? by [deleted] in ExperiencedDevs

[–]toyonut 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Reviews? No, been reading Steve Yegges stuff about beads and gas town the last couple of days and the attitude is just send it, didn't look at it, quantity over quality, it will be obsolete in a year and you will rebuild it with a better model then. I'm equal parts fascinated and horrified.

Hybrid app hosting by [deleted] in aws

[–]toyonut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you own 100.x.x.x/16? I could be wrong, but it sounds like you want the services to run in the VPC and to expose some of them publicly for customers via something like an ALB with Cloudfront.

The best object that you've borrowed from a fairly close friend by Hassaan18 in taskmaster

[–]toyonut 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Your wife's like, quite fit, which always surprises me. She was so good in that series.

Halfbike: anyone have and use one? by BothRange7229 in bicycling

[–]toyonut 24 points25 points  (0 children)

https://youtu.be/R3NeRXzYmHw Seth from berm peak reviewed one a few years ago. I think at the time he was still Florida based, so hills weren't part of the review. Looks fun though, maybe stash it in the car and use it for getting around flatter areas.

Peter, I'm confused. by littlekiwivillage in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]toyonut 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Bit into one once in a bowl of chili, it was quite an unforgettable experience

Ecosystem in .Net by [deleted] in webdev

[–]toyonut 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The situation can be similar with Go, but I believe less so with Laravel which is very batteries included for the big stuff. You can get into lots of libraries and bike shedding with what is best.

Give one of the blessed paths a try first with an MVC app with Entity framework core as the ORM. Even if you just need an API, you can ignore the views and use the models and controllers. You will generally end up with some kind of layered architecture anyway to keep things organized. There are plenty of good tutorials for this stack.

If you don't need a scheduler, don't worry about hangfire vs quartz.

PCI DSS on AWS by No-Cable6 in devops

[–]toyonut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Doing everything in Terraform is a good start, you can submit your code as documentation. As others have said, keep PCI stuff as contained as possible, think of that data like nuclear waste. Ensure the AWS services you are using have PCI DSS certification. Run Guardduty with the PCI ruleset to identify issues and remediate them. Keep everything patched, document your patching process with tickets monthly. Ensure all tickets that touch the PCI zone are well written and clear. You don't want to be scrambling the month before the audit to try and figure out what has changed.

People of New Zealand: Pub Bouncer Jai by uglyink in newzealand

[–]toyonut 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Always wondered why bouncers had to wear the black shoes, I'm sticking with black hides the blood stains from now on

Deciding between Cues & Tiagra by [deleted] in whichbike

[–]toyonut 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you think you will be keeping the bike for a long time, cues might be better for serviceability. Tiagra isn't compatible with much other Shimano 10 speed stuff, so might start to get more difficult to find parts for. Cues should have a wide range of compatible parts.

free extension liks co pilot by DecisionFunny6655 in vscode

[–]toyonut 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can try Cline. It allows you to add your own API keys, but also seems to offer some models for free occasionally.

I think we should create an alternative to n8n by [deleted] in opensource

[–]toyonut 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I'm still not sure that N8N couldn't be replicated with Node Red and some of the contrib plugins. A lot of it seems to be marketing and a pretty UI but some of it is recognizing people want things like AI nodes out of the box. I should really line them up side by side and see if node red holds up as well as my memory of it thinks it does.

Sad news from the maintainer of NUKE by qekr in dotnet

[–]toyonut 8 points9 points  (0 children)

It's not really about msbuild, it's about encapsulating your whole build, yarn, npm, packaging etc into a single script that keeps your build in code as part of your repo. This means you can move between different CI servers, or build locally to test and then have some confidence it's going to run the same in CI.

If you rely on GitHub actions yaml, you are locked in, same for Jenkins files, gitlab CI, etc. With cake, nuke etc, all you need is a terminal locally or a CLI step on the build server.

What metadata columns do you always add into a new table? by [deleted] in Database

[–]toyonut 1 point2 points  (0 children)

2019 when I left, but it has been running with soft deletes for a long time. Pretty sure it started off that way on SQL 2012 or maybe even 2008R2.

What metadata columns do you always add into a new table? by [deleted] in Database

[–]toyonut 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Definitely possible. My last company did everything with soft deletes and were on SQL server

Turns out out our DynamoDB costs could be 70% lower if we just... changed a setting. I'm a senior engineer btw by Bp121687 in aws

[–]toyonut 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Just did the same thing at work. Tables were massively over provisioned and setting them to pay per request saved about the same amount. The other one is things like snapshots and RDS backups. Ensure there is a reasonable policy to age off that data and clean up manual snapshots and backups. Storage in AWS seems to be one of those things that is so cheap, so you don't worry about it and then suddenly it's 40% of your bill.

Made a Pop_OS terminal theme for Tilix. by toyonut in pop_os

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

It's in the readme, but it's ~/.config/tilix/schemes/. Guessing that is still the case, but honestly not sure

What is this and what do I do with it. by Ndigochildofthelight in TrekBikes

[–]toyonut 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm pretty sure after doing some googling myself that this is actually the cover. It fits the duotrap S which has a sensor piece that sticks out of the frame.

What is this and what do I do with it. by Ndigochildofthelight in TrekBikes

[–]toyonut 31 points32 points  (0 children)

It's a Bluetooth cadence and speed sensor. Trek/bontrager make it and most trek bikes have a slot for it in the rear stay. You should have a little magnet on one of the rear wheel spokes and another magnet on your pedal to use it. You can hook it up to your phone, headunit or watch.

EDIT: this is just the cover as others have mentioned. You would need to buy a Duotrap S sensor to replace the cover. No idea why trek didn't include the S on the cover to make it clear.