Data Science

  • 22 Posts
  • 118 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • ericjmorey@programming.devtoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldMozilla grants Ente $100k
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    2 months ago

    Ente is a beautiful, private cloud for your memories, with apps for mobile, desktop and web.

    At Ente, we use Local AI to deliver features like face recognition and magic search, while respecting the privacy of your photos.

    We’ll now join a cohort of builders pushing technology forward for an AI that is light, private and accessible.




  • Nice article.

    why bother? Why I self host

    Most of this article is not purely about that question, but I dislike clickbait, so I’ll actually answer the question from the title: Two reasons.

    First of all, I like to be independent - or at least, as much as I can. Same reason we have backup power, why I know how to bake bread, preserve food, and generally LARP as a grandmother desperate to feed her 12 grandchildren until they are no longer capable of self propelled movement. It makes me reasonably independent of whatever evil scheme your local $MEGA_CORP is up to these days (hint: it’s probably a subscription).

    It’s basically the Linux and Firefox argument - competition is good, and freedom is too.

    If that’s too abstract for you, and what this article is really about, is the fact that it teaches you a lot and that is a truth I hold to be self-evident: Learning things is good & useful.

    Turns out, forcing yourself to either do something you don’t do every day, or to get better at something you do occasionally, or to simply learn something that sounds fun makes you better at it. Wild concept, I know.

    Contents

    Introduction
    My Services
    Why I self host
    Reasoning about complex systems
    Things that broke in the last 6 months
    Things I learned (or recalled) in the last 6 months

    • You can self host VS Code
    • UPS batteries die silently and quicker than you think
    • Redundant DNS is good DNS
    • Raspberry PIs run ARN, Proxmox does not
    • zfs + Proxmox eat memmory and will OOM kill your VMS
    • The mystery of random crashes (Is it hardware? It’s always hardware.)
    • SNMP(v3) is still cool
    • Don’t trust your VPS vendor
    • Gotta go fast
    • CIFS is still not fast
    • Blob storage, blob fish, and file systems: It’s all “meh”
    • CrowdSec

    Conclusion







  • This is a web service that returns the ActivityPub data for any URL that returns an ActivityPub message. For instance this post (https://lemmy.ml/post/19589249) returns:

    {
      "@context": [
        "https://join-lemmy.org/context.json",
        "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams"
      ],
      "type": "Page",
      "id": "https://lemmy.ml/post/19589249",
      "attributedTo": "https://lemmy.ml/u/hongminhee",
      "to": [
        "https://lemmy.world/c/fediverse",
        "https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public"
      ],
      "name": "BrowserPub: A browser for debugging ActivityPub and the ⁂fediverse",
      "cc": [],
      "mediaType": "text/html",
      "attachment": [
        {
          "href": "https://podcastindex.social/@js/113011966366461060",
          "mediaType": "text/html; charset=utf-8",
          "type": "Link"
        }
      ],
      "sensitive": false,
      "published": "2024-08-26T11:43:09.033551Z",
      "language": {
        "identifier": "en",
        "name": "English"
      },
      "audience": "https://lemmy.world/c/fediverse",
      "tag": [
        {
          "href": "https://lemmy.ml/post/19589249",
          "name": "#fediverse",
          "type": "Hashtag"
        }
      ]
    }
    

    Prepend https://browser.pub/ to the URL you want to check: https://browser.pub/https://lemmy.ml/post/19589249













  • I’ve read that. Defining a supplier as someone with whom you have a direct business relationship with seems intentionally narrow in an unhelpful way that just further muddies the waters around the issue at hand. Making something generally available to others means that you’re supplying others with that thing. While it’s true that you may have no further obligations to those that receive your software, the person receiving the software needs to evaluate their risks around using and depending on that software regardless of the existence of a business relationship with the supplier. Hence supply chain risk evaluation is always necessary. That risk evaluation, or lack thereof, can result in a security problem. These problems can propagate widely within a software ecosystem. This is true with and without the existence of direct business relationships between suppliers and recipients of software.

    The whole article can be summarized by saying if you want support services related to the software written by others, negotiate a support agreement related to that software. That has nothing to do with taking a wide or narrow interpretation of the word supplier.