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The figures in the different chapters are in english (it's not the case for the image in README_en.md).

Thanks for the heads-up! We noticed that discrepancy as well and have just updated the README_en.md with the correct English diagram. It should be displaying correctly now.

same


I was there few months ago and I found them to be quite good too, both in coverage (shops, bus/metro networks) and accuracy. Obviously, not the apps I'm used to so & the language but otherwise, it was okay.


It's possible indeed as I'm doing it for another reason (monitoring sovereigty).

You can ask Icann [0] access to gTld domain list files (if you have a legitimate reason to do so). Once access you are granted access to a gTld, you can download a compressed csv file with a line per couple <domain, nameserver>.

[0] https://czds.icann.org/home


Could you elaborate on your strategy to rotate your disks ?


It's pretty simple: the backup host has the backup disk attached via a usb cradle. There's a file in the root directory of the backup disk file system that gets touched when the drive is rotated. A cron jobs emails me if this file is more than 3 months old. When I rotate the disk, I format the new disk and recreate the restic repos for the remote hosts. I then move the old disk into a fireproof safe. I keep four drives in rotation, so at any given point in time I have the online drive plus three with progressively older backup sets in the safe.


And then, after a year what do you do with the oldest hard drive ? Does it enter the cycle again, do you destruct it or do you use it in a failsafe environnement ? The procedure looks OK and I would like to make it more organised myself, just trying to find the right balance.


The drive enters the cycle again. I use the drives until they show signs of failure (SMART monitoring/testing), or until I need to upgrade for capacity reasons.

I'm using "recertified" (really, used) drives that I've written about here: https://marcusb.org/posts/2024/03/used-hard-drives-from-tech.... They are inexpensive and, so far, have been very reliable. (And, yes, I've done restores from the backup sets.)


Thanks for the reference, it makes sense.


NoLimitSecu, French cybersecurity podcast, released an episode yesterday with the authors: https://www.nolimitsecu.fr/compromission-de-distributions-li...

It was amazing to hear that they chose the weakest path, argument injection and were able to found a vector in two weeks twice (fedora + opensuse).


And often those places are islands, meaning their grid are isolated.


well, java is island but the island have BIG populations


Great for them, I guess. I live thousands of miles away from Java. You? The point isn’t “there are 1500 active volcanoes on the planet”, the point is is “there are many places not in the proximity of one of 1500 active volcanoes”.


I live in Martinique, in the Caribbean and there is a somewhat inactive [0] volcano. To generate electricity, we are importing oil/biogaz from Europe. Solar is ramping up but it makes sense to use volcano heat if: - the associated risks are low (earthquakes, just got a 4.8 30 minutes ago [1]) - tropical climate does not make maintenance too costly

Even if it's not the cheapest option, if it can provide some backup, that could be an option. Because solar panel and hurricanes are not best friends.

[0] that kills 30k people in 1902 : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1902_eruption_of_Mount_Pel%C3%... [1] https://www.emsc-csem.org/Earthquake_information/earthquake....


I'm currently in the Caribbean with our sailboat. We spent almost a month on Martinique (St. Anne, Anse Mitan, St. Pierre), and were wondering a bit about the low amount of renewables being used.

Theory was that both wind and solar are too risky due to the frequent hurricanes. But maybe there's more local nuance? Too cheap diesel?


The 28th regime will provide interesting insights on whether or not EU members are willing to move on fiscal harmonization.

I live in Martinique, a French outermost region and although we are in the Caribbean, we are also in the EU. This creates some friction as the standard CE norm is usually not available in neighbouring countries, therefore : 1. goods mostly come from EU (specifically France) 2. because goods have to travel across the ocean, prices are higher 3. because prices are higher, specific tax laws are maintained and new ones are introduced with the aim to make prices lower 4. specific tax law introduces another barrier and limit competition 5. because competition is low, prices are high(er)

Harmonization vs the use of specific tax law/rules is a never ending discussion in Martinique.

In the US mad king context, I'm looking forward to it.


  Location: Martinique (UTC-4) / France
  Remote: yes
  Willing to relocate: open to discussion
  Technologies: Python, Spark, SQL, Javascript, APIs
  Résumé/CV: https://guillem.lefait.fr/cv-glefait-en.pdf
  Email: guillem@hey.com
Data dev/manager with strong interests in cybersec, willing to find a position in a team working to stop the bad guys with the right data.


Well done !

In the github page https://github.com/paradedb/paradedb/tree/dev/pg_lakehouse, DataFusion still appear and probably should be replaced by DuckDB.


!! Thank you, I've put up a PR to fix this


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