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Considering that even one of those rockets cost more than the income of a middle class worker in 2 or even 3 years is fucking ridiculous

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Biometrics aren't secrets. It seems like "a good quality infrared image of the target's face" is hard to get right now only because the tech isn't ubiquitous yet. Wait until every website the user logs into has a copy. arstechnica.com/information-te

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Q: If you run a chip fab, when clients complain your Mask ROM microcontrollers have long lead time, what do you say?

A: ROM wasn't build in a day.

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RT @ilumium@twitter.com

🇩🇪 bar association: Our attorney software #beA has #e2ee!

Researchers: No, your servers can read stuff.

🇩🇪: OK, but our encryption is good enough. We don't need e2ee.

🇺🇸 law firm #ReidelLaw: Hold my beer: reidellawfirm.com/wp-content/u CC @matrixdotorg@twitter.com @element_hq@twitter.com

🐦🔗: twitter.com/ilumium/status/141

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Thanks gitlab, I'm only y'know.. the maintainer of this project...

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The hackernews post about the steam machine has become an arch v debian battlefield

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I swear to god I'm not old
Shut up about my grandchildren youtube.

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"We believe your phone should be your castle and that you should be in control of your own computer, not us and not any other vendor." #privacy #librem5 #librem5usa puri.sm/posts/your-phone-is-yo

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Today's win is an important victory for users everywhere. We will continue to fight to ensure that computer crime laws no longer chill security research, journalism, and other novel and interoperable uses of technology that ultimately benefit all of us. eff.org/deeplinks/2021/06/supr

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The EU's DMA proposal includes several "nice to haves," but is missing key standards, such as an interoperability obligation for platforms’ core services to foster innovation and put users back in control of their data, privacy, and online experience. eff.org/pages/dma-proposal-eff

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Groups who are particularly tech-savvy could, like police officers, easily figure out which songs result in videos being removed and use that knowledge to keep speech they don’t like offline. eff.org/deeplinks/2021/02/cops

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Thinking about traveling abroad now that more people are vaccinated? One of our clients in our border search phone case has a warning for you. cnn.com/2021/05/25/opinions/wa

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Amazon Ring is the largest civilian surveillance network the US has ever seen: one in 10 US police departments can now access videos from millions of Ring cameras without a warrant: u.fsf.org/3cq

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Establishing a right to repair in New York makes it easier for people to fix their broken devices, helps independent businesses, and helps the environment. Tell your lawmakers to support S04104 and A07006. act.eff.org/action/new-york-st

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Someone was asking recently how to make choices amongst options for complex products they had little current experience with. I think this was @kensanata though I can't find the toot in question.

Specifically, the issue was making sense of a bunch of online reviews of dubious origin, reputation, expertise, and validity. In this case a piece of musical equipment if I recall.

I'd meant to reply at the time, my advice remains:

Find local domain experts you trust. A local band, music shop (if it exists), school, etc. Practitioners tend to be the most expert users.
Recognise the difference between expert/professional systems, and mass-market kit. Yes, the former is often expensive, but as a twist, the latter is often junk.
In some cases, practitioners may be cash-poor and looking to offload old kit cheap. Bonus.

One recommendation comes from my years in Linux advocacy, and the perrenial question, "what distro should I use?"

All the mainstream ones are more than sufficient. Generalising, major branding does have value.
There's a key differentiator that experts will be aware of, for Linux that's the package management system, effectively the core from which the rest of the system depends. Find your products core structure.
If you're going to rely on someone local for support, use what they use, recommend, and support. Your key differentiator here is has support, and what has support is what your local domain expert uses. Yes, this might mean you're using something oddball by global standards, but in your own universe it's blesssed.

Otherwise, finding an inexpensive-but-not-bottom-of-the-barrel option as your first experience is useful.

Borrow / lend / lease is a great way to get familiarity. As are hands-on educational / training / testing sessions. (There are reasons vendors often support these.)

If you don't have local experts, find discussions or trade publications, ignore tha ads, and see what the practitioners talk about in their own equipment. If you can find a "how I got started" discussion, look to that, as beginner and expert needs do differ. Early experiences are often a mix of nostalgia and frustration with equipment or tool limitations, so there's that going for you.

(Way back in the day I was looking through a tech magazine packed with Iomega adverts, though the technical credits lauded magneto-optical drives. The latter were spendy, but didn't suffer the click-of-death issues of the advertised crap. Pay attention to what's used, not what's shilled.)

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#Ryanair is "sincerely apologizing to all affected passengers for a regrettable delay". What is a kidnapping if not a regrettable delay huh #Belarus

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