- 4 Posts
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There is some distribution of effort/expertise at least:
When an individual researcher or an organization discovers a new bug in some product, a CVE program partner — there are currently a few hundred across 40 countries — is asked to assess the vulnerability report and assign a unique CVE identifier for the flaw if and as necessary.
https://www.theregister.com/2025/04/16/homeland_security_funding_for_cve/
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How do I use HTTPS on a private LAN without self-signed certs?English1·23 days agoNot on Firefox, some site functionality is disabled: https://medium.com/@leonardodna/the-ultimate-newbie-guide-for-self-signed-certificates-d81aa3b9987b
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How do I use HTTPS on a private LAN without self-signed certs?English1·26 days agoI know what you mean but using real self-signed certificates (i.e. no CA at all) with modern browsers causes so many issues I find them unusable.
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How do I use HTTPS on a private LAN without self-signed certs?English131·27 days agoI’ll mention this as no one has yet but you can be your own CA. Tools like mkcert make it easy
https://github.com/FiloSottile/mkcert
This is potentially more hassle (than using public DNS) as you have to get your CA certs onto every device. However it may be suitable depending on the situation.
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldto movies@piefed.social•Hannibal Rising, released in 2007, is terrible. Horrible. Awful. Where do I even start?2·1 month agoThe first appearance of Hannibal Lecter in film was Manhunter(1986) I think. Silence of the Lambs and sequels are viewed as separate I guess as they have little in common apart from the source material.
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Bluesky users debate plans around user data and AI training | TechCrunchEnglish2·2 months agoTake a look at https://fedi.tips/ also
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldto Programming@programming.dev•a country guessing game with an ASCII art map2·2 months agoIt’s a bit like using directories/folders to organise your work - you don’t have to have separate projects in separate folders but it really helps the more projects you have going on. Also once you have two Python projects that require different versions of the same dependency things will get messy.
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldto Programming@programming.dev•a country guessing game with an ASCII art map4·2 months agoAre you using a virtual env to isolate the environment of the game from the rest ofyour system? There are a few ways/tools to do it but maybe start here:
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Google Chrome disables uBlock Origin for some in Manifest v3 rolloutEnglish4·2 months agoIf you have the time try the troubleshoot mode to help figure it out - add ons are often the cause
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/troubleshoot-firefox-crashes-closing-or-quitting
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldOPto Bash@lemmy.ml•255 return code from command substitution of wait builtin but why?English1·3 months agoThanks, that was it! I’ve updated the post to include a final subshell example where we get the 127 return code we might have expected instead of the 255 from the second paragraph.
There’s something different about cmd substitution subshells to regular ones that produces this behaviour (the 255), it’s a quirk of BASH.
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•The Tech to Build the Holodeck [Gaussian Splatting]English4·3 months agoMaybe this method could one day be used with open street map
I once heard a recommendation that there’s nothing better for neurodivergent people then to spend time with their own. Have a look and see if any places near you do sensory/neurodivergent events. I am thinking of things like cinema screenings and soft play. As awareness seems to be growing in some countries demand is emerging for e.g. low volume cinema screenings, lights turned down, low numbers of attendees etc. Whilst your child might not need all these accommodations there will be other children there who are neurodivergent for them to meet and (hopefully) a higher level of acceptance and understanding amongst all the parents.
If your child has special interests then events focussed on those subjects may attract similar types of children. It’s a bit of a cliche/stereotype but communities like boardgames, pokemon, videogames, train enthusiasts etc often have events/rules/customs that provide clear ways to engage with others even non-verbally. For example there are people running Minecraft servers purely for neurodivergent children.
If you’re really lucky there may even be parent meet ups or workshops in your area that bring neurodivergent kids together and help them to value their difference. Creating a social life independent of school for your child could be really valuable in their years ahead and for you too, helping them keep a core group of friends even when they transition between schools.
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Photo management at the cmdline - recommendations?2·7 months agoI think you’ve hit the nail on the head so to speak…it’s just too small/custom a thing for anyone to have built a dedicated tool it seems. In the end I am looking at using my file manager (nautlius) to automatically run a custom exiftool/bash script on chosen files so I can just click and rename/fix metadata etc as I browse through the files. Probably good enough for now.
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Photo management at the cmdline - recommendations?3·7 months ago💯 ! I been considering git-annex too which might let me treat all the photos like any git repo without the bloat.
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Photo management at the cmdline - recommendations?1·7 months agoThat looks a very useful tool, thanks. I think it could be just the thing for bulk renaming photos to standard names.
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Photo management at the cmdline - recommendations?1·7 months agoThank you for this. I think this has some of the operations I need, I will dig into the code.
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Alternative to syncthing for large music collection?4·7 months agoSo git-annex should let you just pull down the files you want to work on, make your changes, then push them back upstream. No need to continuously sync entire collection. Requires some git knowledge and wading through git-annex docs but the walkthrough is a good place for an overview: https://git-annex.branchable.com/walkthrough/
IanTwenty@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Do you selfhost your own blog/website?English1·7 months agoYou can do the same with GitLab as another option, it supports custom domains too.
I seem to get pop-up notifications for free in GNOME/Fedora by setting these levels in
/etc/UPower/UPower.conf
:UsePercentageForPolicy=true PercentageLow=50 PercentageCritical=20 PercentageAction=10
I think you can also configure the system to take action when it reaches the lowest level with e.g.
# The action to take when "TimeAction" or "PercentageAction" above has been # reached for the batteries (UPS or laptop batteries) supplying the computer CriticalPowerAction=PowerOff
However I don’t know how to get these GNOME “Power” notifications to play an audible sound (without turning on notification sounds for ALL notifications). The best I could find is this: David Bazile / gaudible · GitLab
There’s talk of better control of sound notifications in GNOME 47+, but looks like nothing much has landed yet: Notifications in 46 and beyond – GNOME Shell & Mutter
I don’t see anyone talking about the human side so I’ll ask - what is the appetite for change? I can see you yourself are motivated and that’s great. How do you feel the attitude is with the others there? Migrating a company that’s been working analogue for decades sounds like a big change programme regardless of the tech choices you ultimately make. This sounds like process change as well as technology change and that requires using another set of skills to wrangle the people.
I would advise to pick a small area first that’s causing the most pain but also very amenable to common tech most people are already familiar with and is only a small change to existing processes. Get an early visible success.
The photo management might be a good start as we all are used to these apps on our phones and the tech is mature and easy to find in FOSS.
Everyone loves Immich though it has some big warnings on its github page about its own maturity. Maybe something simpler: just file/photo synching and a shared gallery? It can always be upgraded in future. Syncthing is solid, some kind of NAS and one of the older/mature galleries running on top. Get your backup process nailed down and run a real recovery process before too many photos are at stake.
Anyway it sounds exciting and kudos to you for looking to FOSS. Good luck!