daltschu1

329 posts

daltschu1

daltschu1

@daltschu1

Fan of scuba diving, spearfishing, cars, motorcycles, aviation, and electronics.

Boston, MA Katılım Temmuz 2019
108 Takip Edilen42 Takipçiler
Matthew
Matthew@matts_1976·
@chrisramsay52 @ufouapam @JeremyCorbell To all the people that are calling out Jeremy for being a grifter and give us the stuff for free I say go do it yourself. How about YOU go put your life on hold you go spend your time and money on this. Keyboard warriors go do the hard work yourself and see how far you get.
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Chris Ramsay
Chris Ramsay@chrisramsay52·
Reading some of the comments about Jeremy Corbell’s recent appearance on my show. I thought I would address them here, as there are many. I think the serious nature of this topic becomes apparent when seeing the toll it has on some of us. As a Youtube content creator, I can remove myself from this seriousness quite easily. That isn’t the case with most of those who are on the cutting edge of public disclosure. I am not a journalist, I do not meet with people on the “inside” and I am not interested in endangering my life for this stuff. But there are people (despite many people’s reluctance to believe it) that do these things willingly and that must affect them in ways I can only imagine. It is impossible to think negatively about someone when you have an understanding of who they are. The more you understand someone, the more empathy you will have for them. With public figures, we are given a projection of a piece of who they are and that is never representative of the whole. I hope people will also have an understanding heart if I find myself in a tough spot one day. ❤️
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Chris Koerner
Chris Koerner@mhp_guy·
Is it just me or is everything both lower quality than ever and more expensive than ever? Today I had the privilege of: - Getting sprayed in the face with my “made in the USA extra durable” garden hose - Pulling weeds out of my “extra thick commercial grade” weed barrier - Watching my $300 aerator that took 4 hours to assemble get bent in half because I had to audacity to back up an inch - Pouring gasoline all over my shed as I filled my weedeater - Watching my $800 57 day old Milwaukee pole saw bite the dust I will pay whatever you charge just please someone - ANYONE make a decent product! (I also had to clean my mower engine today because it kept stalling but I don’t blame Toro it had just been a while)
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daltschu1
daltschu1@daltschu1·
@it_a_me_knowlzy I see constantly people saying rock stacking causes problems. I feel this is absurd. Do you disrupt the micro ecology of the specific spot where the rocks were? Sure fine. Does 1000 people walking on a trail also cause a huge amount of disruption to the same thing? Also yes.
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Adam Knowles
Adam Knowles@it_a_me_knowlzy·
This a neutral topic of mine for quite some time. What is the actual ecological damage of ppl stacking rocks? I always thought of it as a few moments someone wasn’t on their phone but in nature doing something. Figuring out a puzzle of going higher when they can’t just ask grok how to do it.
👣ℙ𝕖𝕕𝕣𝕠'𝕤 𝕄𝕦𝕤𝕥𝕒𝕔𝕙𝕖🇺🇲@OfAthenry

Kick these stupid things down every time you see them. They disrupt the ecosystem.

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daltschu1
daltschu1@daltschu1·
@TheChrisLambert You moron. He watched gravity 10 years ago and when people brought up interstellar in conversation he associated that movie as it. Not that he watched it today and thought it was interstellar.
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Tomek Czajka
Tomek Czajka@TCzajka·
No feedback is security theater. Leaking the length is insignificant, it's less than 0.1 bit of entropy loss. If somebody wanted to watch you type a password, they would get better results from watching the keyboard rather than counting the asterisks on the screen. Feedback protects you from typing the password into the wrong window.
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The Lunduke Journal
The Lunduke Journal@LundukeJournal·
The Rust-re-write of sudo has decided to prioritize “user experience” over security. “Change the default so that asterisks are shown when entering passwords.” … “Security is theoretically worse since password lengths are exposed to people watching your screen, but this is an infinitesimal benefit far outweighed by the UX issue.” This change has already been included in the upcoming release of Ubuntu 26.04, scheduled to ship in April. github.com/trifectatechfo…
The Lunduke Journal tweet mediaThe Lunduke Journal tweet media
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vakibs
vakibs@vakibs·
@DaveRBanerjee Really silly of you to think that the Pentagon doesn’t have access to state of the art models. They most likely have at least a few months of technical lead ahead than what is disclosed in the public domain, probably even a few years. That’s the whole point.
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Dave Banerjee
Dave Banerjee@DaveRBanerjee·
It's crazy how I read this and think "dang, I really hope DeepMind and OpenAI don't buckle" I don't even consider xAI. They're so far gone in the gutter it doesn't even cross my mind It really is a shame...
vitalik.eth@VitalikButerin

It will significantly increase my opinion of @Anthropic if they do not back down, and honorably eat the consequences. (For those who are not aware, so far they have been maintaining the two red lines of "no fully autonomous weapons" and "no mass surveillance of Americans". Actually a very conservative and limited posture, it's not even anti-military. IMO fully autonomous weapons and mass privacy violation are two things we all want less of, so in my ideal world anyone working on those things gets access to the same open-weights LLMs as everyone else, and exactly nothing on top of that. Of course we won't get anywhere close to that world, but if we get even 10% closer to that world that's good, and if we get 10% further that's bad) CC @DarioAmodei firefly.social/post/bsky/pv7f…

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daltschu1
daltschu1@daltschu1·
@auralix4 You are expecting someone to post a radical transformative achievement when in reality all people wanted was a personal assistant and thats exactly what it does well at and has been doing for people. You are missing the whole point.
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daltschu1
daltschu1@daltschu1·
@bowtiedgerman @SamHouston713 Lmao no its not. Maybe for one of the properties on the water but there's plenty of mud level housing your average person can afford all over the island.
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Mikhail Parakhin
Mikhail Parakhin@MParakhin·
I unashamedly love Windows. Always had. Anthropic folks - apparently, not so much :-), Claude Code is super-buggy on Windows. If you want to avoid spending a lot of time fixing NTFS issues, add this to claude.md ## Windows Shell Safety The Bash tool runs under Git Bash (MSYS2), **not** cmd.exe. This causes critical issues with Windows-style commands: - **NEVER use `2>nul`** — Bash interprets this literally and creates a file called `nul`. On Windows NTFS, `nul` is a reserved device name, making the file extremely difficult to delete (requires UAC/admin privileges). Use `2>/dev/null` instead. - **NEVER use `rmdir /s /q`** — Bash `rmdir` does not understand cmd.exe flags. Use `rm -rf` instead. - **NEVER use `del`** — Not available in Bash. Use `rm` instead. - **NEVER use `dir`** — Use `ls` instead. - **For Windows-native commands**, wrap in `cmd /c "..."` explicitly. - In general, always use Unix-style commands and paths in the Bash tool.
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Dr. M.F. Khan
Dr. M.F. Khan@Dr_TheHistories·
Between 1982-2007, every Russian Soyuz capsule carried an unusual piece of equipment—the TP-82 survival pistol. This wasn't about threats in orbit. It was about what waited on the ground. The weapon addressed a specific problem: Russian cosmonauts might land anywhere across thousands of miles of wilderness, facing temperatures that could kill and predators that could maul. In March 1965, cosmonaut Alexey Leonov discovered this reality firsthand when his Voskhod 2 capsule landed 600 miles off course in the Ural Mountains. Armed with only a nine-millimeter pistol, he spent two nights in bear and wolf territory before rescue teams could reach him through the dense forest. The TP-82 emerged from Leonov's experience. By 1981, as a major general overseeing cosmonaut training, he commissioned a proper survival weapon. Tula Arms Plant delivered an ingenious design—essentially a sawed-off double-barreled shotgun with an added rifle barrel underneath. The right hammer fired 12.5mm shotgun shells from a smoothbore barrel. The left hammer could switch between a second shotgun barrel and a 5.45mm rifle barrel below. This gave cosmonauts options: bird shot for small game, signal flares for rescue, and rifle rounds powerful enough to deter a thousand-pound brown bear. A machete slotted into the pistol grip to form a stock, and doubled as a tool for building emergency shelters from snow. The weapon first flew aboard Soyuz T-6 in June 1982. Every cosmonaut trained with it, learning both its mechanics and the Voskhod 2 survival story that justified its existence. The gun's simple manual action prevented jams in the damp cold of Siberian forests. Its ammunition belt carried 11 rifle rounds and 10 each of shot and flare cartridges—enough firepower and signaling capability to bridge the gap between crash landing and rescue. The Soviet military produced ammunition until 1987, and the TP-82 remained standard equipment on every Soyuz mission through 2006. Even international crews, including American astronauts bound for the International Space Station, trained with the weapon as part of mandatory Russian survival courses in Siberia and the Black Sea. The TP-82 disappeared from space in 2007 when its custom ammunition exceeded shelf life. Russian officials replaced it with standard military sidearms, though the space agency refuses to discuss specifics. Modern GPS and satellite communications have reduced stranding risks, but they haven't eliminated them. In 2008, a Soyuz capsule made an emergency ballistic reentry and landed 250 miles off course. Mission control lost contact. For thirty minutes, the crew—including South Korea's first astronaut—sat completely off the grid before calling in their location via satellite phone. Today, Russian crews vote on whether to carry weapons at all, and increasingly choose not to. Some argue guns have no place in spacecraft, especially given the psychological pressures of space travel. Others note that accidents remain possible, and wilderness survival sometimes demands more than a phone. The TP-82 represents a distinctly Russian approach to space travel—pragmatic preparation for worst-case scenarios shaped by geography and history. While American astronauts trained for ocean splashdowns, Russian cosmonauts prepared for Siberian taiga. The weapon acknowledged a simple truth: technology fails, weather changes, and sometimes the greatest danger isn't in space but in the moments after coming home. Whether future crews should carry guns remains debatable, but Leonov's experience established a precedent that lasted four decades. When you might land in bear country 600 miles from civilization, better to have the firepower and not need it than face wolves with empty hands. #drthehistories
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Pat Carino (d/b/a Acquisizioni)
My dad has this thing where he buys WeatherTech car floor mats and cuts them to size under every sink in his house (and mine too of course) so it will catch any leak from damaging the cabinet / floor etc. My plumber saw it for the first time recently and was impressed.
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V
V@hirletz·
@LLMJunky They just released image model cheaper and faster than nano banana what are you talking about
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daltschu1
daltschu1@daltschu1·
@jsrailton How exactly do you expect that to work on a c14 plug genius?
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John Scott-Railton
John Scott-Railton@jsrailton·
Your 'privacy' VPN is still a physical server in somebodies jurisdiction. Claim of RAM disk servers as protection is...interesting. I know nothing more about this case, but keep in mind that hotplugs that let authorities seize a server without cutting power are commonplace 1/
John Scott-Railton tweet media
Windscribe@windscribecom

THIS IS NOT A DRILL: The Dutch authorities, without a warrant, just seized one of our VPN servers saying they'll give it back after they "fully analyze it". Windscribe uses RAM disk servers so the only thing the authorities will find is a stock Ubuntu install. The bigger worry is the unredacted Epstein files we had on there...

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daltschu1
daltschu1@daltschu1·
@lemire The only reason for this is licensing
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Daniel Lemire
Daniel Lemire@lemire·
Your Playstation runs FreeBSD. Not everything is Linux.
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Sam Seely
Sam Seely@samseely·
@nabeelqu I love when he looks right at the camera post-kick. When I saw this in theaters people went nuts
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Nabeel S. Qureshi
Nabeel S. Qureshi@nabeelqu·
One of the most impressive things I've ever seen, just completely incomprehensible, is Alex Honnold doing this famous section of El Capitan ("The Boulder Problem") during his free solo. It's ~V7 difficulty, ~2000 feet in the air. The holds are so tiny. Makes me sweat watching it.
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daltschu1
daltschu1@daltschu1·
@dennisbhooper Everyone dunks on him now but his book goes over all this and its genuinely hysterical. Well worth a read.
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daltschu1
daltschu1@daltschu1·
@ilyasu @pitdesi How often is a tipline called by an OSINT person compared to just a friend/family member. I'd wager the first one is real low.
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Ilya Sukhar
Ilya Sukhar@ilyasu·
@pitdesi Yes in that it could attract sophisticated OSINT folks much like higher bug bounties attract better hackers.
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Ilya Sukhar
Ilya Sukhar@ilyasu·
Is there some structural reason why FBI tip rewards are so low? They're offering $50k for the Brown shooter and the manpower allocated to the effort must be >$50k per hour?
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Sense and Irritability
Sense and Irritability@RichWright284·
@AnechoicMedia_ Seems just a rip-off of Giger's Alien aesthetic too. I've played all the 2D games up to Fusion and I don't recall anything like that in them. There is a sort of motherliness to Samus' character but as you say, it's subtle and just that, not putting vaginas everywhere.
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AnechoicMedia
AnechoicMedia@AnechoicMedia_·
One of the dumber recurring conversations is how remakes and sequels take themes were present in an older work and replace them with insultingly obvious, tasteless, and distracting messages in the new production. Then the media literacy crowd chimes in to say "you dull neanderthal, the author was always telling a story about masculinity, so you're stupid for complaining that the remake is literally shoving dicks in your face". This is more intellectually insulting to the art than to the modern audience complaining about it. Also not that I'm a feminist or anything but saying "themes of motherhood" is on the same level as "just showing you vaginas" seems pretty demeaning, like some sort of 80s feminist shock art piece that stopped being edgy long ago.
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