Aw what a beautiful snake
- 186 Posts
- 723 Comments
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•This would be a nice temperature for Easter, not for Christmas Eve.English
727·2 years agoI’m not an anti-car person. I also understand that we live in the world we are presented with, and there is a significant systemic oil culture that is difficult and expensive to not consume. I just thought this photo was a little ironic.
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•This would be a nice temperature for Easter, not for Christmas Eve.English
1·2 years agodeleted by creator
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•This would be a nice temperature for Easter, not for Christmas Eve.English
735·2 years agoYou wouldn’t happen to be taking a picture of a screen from a gasoline-powered car, are you?
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
Programming Humor@lemmy.world•This was too funny not to cross-postEnglish
41·2 years agoActually this is rather RS232 over spaghetti.
Then why… nevermind
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
News@lemmy.world•It's not just you: Christmas lights look different now, and can give you headaches — NPREnglish
3·2 years agoLCD monitors don’t flicker at their refresh rate. It simply updates the graphics on the panel per frame at an imperceptible speed. The backlight has nothing to do with the refresh, either.
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
News@lemmy.world•It's not just you: Christmas lights look different now, and can give you headaches — NPREnglish
20·2 years agoNewer LED lights often flicker.
Saved you a click.
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Who in your opinion is the modern day equivalent to Mozart?English
41·2 years agoSquarepusher cones to mind
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Do you actually own anything digital?English
3·2 years agoI do.
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is an obscure piece of media or videogame that you think nobody else here has heard of?English
7·2 years agoI did a little digging and found that Nestle added CDs to their cereals! There were quite a few different titles with different labels. Maybe these links well help you find your games?
There’s a bunch more content here:
What do you mean by “tracked and registered?” What is your goal for “securing even more?”
MAC addresses are visible to anyone sniffing traffic for a wireless LAN, even if they haven’t joined your network. If you are having anonymous folks join your network and you’re granting them access based on MAC addresses, then you could consider this a security risk. They can sniff a MAC, spoof it, and join your network.
Two devices with the same MAC address may cause some routing issues, but it will likely work well enough to have privileged access and be a bad actor. Plus, there are tools that can spoof a network disconnect request as your access point to temporarily kick off the legitimate client.
The easiest way to handle this would be to host two access points. You can typically serve both with one physical piece of hardware. One would be for your private stuff, and you can pretty much give it a full-trust model. Join the network, get the privileges. The other would be for guests. Join that, and you just get Internet access. You can separate these networks with VLANs to achieve this.
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
TechSploits@reddthat.com•Celebrating the first NES Tetris game crashEnglish
2·2 years agoWow, that’s incredible! What a talented player!
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•What Happens When Facebook Heats Your HomeEnglish
503·2 years agoData center heat, with a little external help, warms homes of nearby residents. Nothing unusual or interesting.
Saved you a click.
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Is there an artist whose work you love but was a shitty person?English
71·2 years agoBilly attempted to sell an Alesis SR-16 that was used in his band for $30k. It’s a $100 drum machine. He was selling it himself. No charity or anything; he just tried to hyper-inflate a very common drum machine that is still produced because he thought he added that value to it by owning it. That was pretty weird.
You’d be surprised how little math is involved in programming that doesn’t require it. A significant majority of programming is simply managing conditionals. For example: “when the door opens, turn on the light.”
Math comes into place when you need it, and hardly ever comes as a surprise. Additionally, solved problems are generally kept in libraries. For example, you don’t need to calculate a sum; simply tell it to calculate a sum for you, because this is a solved problem.
What you’re already running into is called “impostor’s syndrome.” You believe that you are not capable of something to some degree, even though reality says otherwise. You haven’t tried your hand at programming, so why worry now? You’re inventing problems for yourself before you even got a chance to start.
Just go for it and see what you think. If you don’t enjoy it, no biggie. If you do enjoy it, keep going. No obligations 👌
Synthead@lemmy.worldto
News@lemmy.world•More couples are choosing a ‘dual income, no kids’ lifestyleEnglish
10·2 years agoLike choosing to not buy a Lamborghini!







That’s mean 😐