Quik

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] Quik 9 points 1 day ago

Einfach beides Scheiße finden ✅

(nicht gleich Scheiße natürlich :/)

[–] Quik 2 points 2 days ago

I live in a bike friendly area of a big German city with good public transit — all of which doesn't matter because the nearest grocery store is less than 50m away from where I'm currently sitting in the apartment...

You're not unreasonable, having good access to basic goods and services is one of the main factors for general quality of life.

[–] Quik 1 points 2 days ago

Ideally, find a job for your husband in an American/international company with an office in Germany or allows working remotely all the time. Ideally you'd find such a job before even moving here. This is the only realistic perspective I know of to get a higher paying job without being pretty much fluent in German (which is hard).

I have seen this work with North and South Americans.

[–] Quik 13 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Wish you luck ;)

[–] Quik 9 points 3 days ago

Upvoted for touching dick story

We are not the same

[–] Quik 2 points 5 days ago

Yes, you'd have to do systemctl --user

[–] Quik 5 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

Actually, I'd argue the soft size is also important, but smaller is actually better for storage...

[–] Quik 12 points 5 days ago

An ever sadder becoming "bingo"

[–] Quik 3 points 5 days ago
36
submitted 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) by Quik to c/idid@sh.itjust.works
 

While I've been enjoying Lemmy for quite some time now, my girlfriend is (was) a pretty active Reddit user and had always been hesitant to switch, mainly because she's active on many niche communities and couldn't decide on an instance.

Was because I just got her to sign up on Lemmy! We picked an instance for her together and she ended up on sh.itjust.works. We then created a list of subreddits that currently don't exist as communities on Lemmy in order of importance to her that she can create over time.

Felt good to be able to share something you like, can recommend ;) Also, giving your loved ones a hands-on introduction (in contrast to just "like e-mail...", cause where is the fun in that?) and picking a server together seems to help as well.

[–] Quik 11 points 6 days ago

As other people noted, Bazzite/Fedora Silverblue can absolutely bite you in the foot if you leave the "normal use cases" — and if you're not just gaming on the device, you sooner or later will. All of this is solvable and IMO worth it, but probably not great for a beginner trying to become more knowledgeable.

Tldr good for absolute beginners, good for "experts" (in both cases because it very rarely gets in your way/breaks)

[–] Quik 43 points 1 week ago (12 children)

Bazzite is a Fedora Atomic based immutable distro focused on gaming, this means...

  • out of the box support for Nvidia cards
  • ships with a lot of useful gaming utilities
  • very hard to break as you should primarily be installing Flatpaks and can do rollbacks

Basically all modern Linux distros have virtualization support, so does Bazzite, of course. Actual performance differences between distros is also negligible, so feel free to choose whatever you like.

https://bazzite.gg/ if you're interested.

 
 

Hi, I live in Germany and only have public IPv6. My address changes only very, very rarely and has never changed in the time I've been self-hosting.

I also have a very small, pretty cheap VPS with static IPv4/IPv6 – which would seem like a great fit for some sort of tunneling/proxy setup. Now comes the question: What/how should I use it? I would like to not have the additional latency for IPv6 enabled hosts, can I just setup a reverse proxy for IPv4? Would Tailscale work for my usecase, what are some resources you found useful when using it?

Currently, I'm just hosting everything IPv6-only and hoping my address never changes, but that does not work for everyone, as especially many new buildings with fiber optic connections still only have IPv4 (strangely).

 

Could mean essentials you wouldn’t want to live without, neat little things you just found, all time favorites— really whatever comes to mind.

 

I am a student in Germany myself and got the rare chance to influence the education about CS/responsible use of technology people get in a special course I will give for the interested in my school this year.

The students will be eight grade and up, and it is a reasonable assumption that I will not have to deal with uninterested students (that and the probably small course size gives me an edge over normal courses beyond my actual planned lessons).

My motivation for investing substantial amounts of time and effort into this is my deeply hold belief that digital literacy is gonna be extremely important in the future, both societally and personally. I have the very unique chance to do something about this, even if only on a local level, and I’m gonna use that. I fail to see the current CS classes in German "high schools" (Gymnasien), and schools with our specialization (humanism) especially, provide needed education. We only had CS classes from grade eleven—where you learn Scratch or something similar and Java basics (most don’t really understand that either, or why you should learn it (a circumstance I very much understand)).
This state of affairs, and the increasing prevalence of smartphones instead of PCs means most students lack any fundamental understanding of the technology they’re using everyday.
My reason to believe that I’d be better at giving CS lessons than trained teachers is that these have to stick to very bad specific guidelines on what to teach, and a lack of CS graduates wanting to become teachers means our school has not a single one who studied any CS (I did).

Some of my personal ideas:

  • how do (basically all) computers work hardware-wise (overview over parts)
  • what is a computer/boot chain/operating system/program
  • hand out USB drives/cheap SSDs to students that they can keep (alternative: a ton of VMs and Proxmox users of one of my hosts) and have everyone pick and install their Linux distro of choice (yes, this is gonna be painful for all involved, but is also—as I suspect many of you already know—extremely rewarding and can be quite fun)
  • learning some "real" programming (would probably teach Python), my approach would be to learn basics and then pick projects and work alone or together (which is useful for learning Git/coding in a remotely readable way)
  • some discussion of open/closed source, corporate tech, enshittification, digital minimalism and philosophy of technology (which would be okay because, you know, humanistic school…)
  • maybe some networking (network stack, OSI, hacking Wifi networks…)

What are your thoughts and suggestions? Took me some time to get to an agreement with the school over this, so I’d like to do my absolute best.

Possibly relevant questions: what fundamental knowledge about tech do you suspect to be still relevant 15 years from now, what would you like to have learnt, what would you find interesting as a student this age…

 

for everyone interested (hopefully obvious /s)

154
Another classic (infosec.pub)
submitted 11 months ago by Quik to c/bertstrips@lemm.ee
 
386
shit happens (infosec.pub)
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by Quik to c/bertstrips@lemm.ee
 
 

Kind of incredible, and really surprising as far as I can see :)

view more: next ›