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One comedy that did a good job of depicting programmers with no sense of hope circa 1999 was Office Space.


Interesting summary. The relationship with some Arab speaking states has had some recent relevance.


Consider this. There are circumstances in Venezuela that some would consider worthy of a civil war. This award winner has chosen peaceful resistance, acts that may have prevented war.


In my experience, the 10-15 year old salvaged computer that still works okay with GNU/Linux is increasingly a 64 bit machine.

Case in point, I'm writing on a x86_64 laptop that was a free give away to me about a year ago with a CPU release year that is 2012.

I have personally given away a x86_64 desktop unit years ago that was even older, might have had DDR1 memory.

Circa 2013 my old company was gifted a x86_64 motherboard with DDR2 memory that ended up serving as our in-office server for many years. We maxed the RAM (8GB) and at some point bought a CPU upgrade on ebay that gave us hardware virtualization extensions.


This is correct. But it can talk in their ear and be a good sycophant while they attend.

For a Star Wars anology, remember that the most important thing that happened to Anikin at the opera in EP III was what was being said to him while he was there.


I'm curious if Wine and ReactOS can run this, sounds like a good stress test.


Skullspace is a hackerspace in Winnipeg, Canada.

On Saturday April 1st we are having our hackerspace festival Hax (https://hax.skullspace.ca).

As part of this, we are seeking one or two more remote speakers to be part of our information security CSides at 4:30pm/16:30 central daylight time (21:30 UTC).

A honorarium is available.

We know this is late notice for a call for presentations, but a talk doesn't need to be long or particularly original. Any live presentation adds value in a new setting. Even 15 minutes including Q&A time would be enjoyed by our diverse attendees.


C-Sides - one layer deeper than the B-Sides security conferences. I personally really find it funny and like it!

It's definitely going to be more low-key than what I've seen from the BSides Winnipeg crew (now The Long Con https://thelongcon.ca ) but I still expect it to be also a lot of fun, especially with the existing talks we've got lined up.


Not only does the government have the right to destroy it, but so does anyone else.

There's no reasonable expectation of recovery when you launch a balloon calibrated to go globe-trotting.

It's basically no different than the person who abandoned a mattress at my apartment block's dumpster. It's littering. They're giving it away, they're not expecting to be able to come back for it later.

Furthermore, nobody has a right to unregistered, unmanned, long duration balloon flight. Such a right would only exist if a state constructed it for its citizens. (and it would end at their boundaries)

I think it's cool that in practice people have been able to do so, but it seems the cool times are coming to an end.


Switching.


They have a good FAQ on this: https://support.starlabs.systems/kb/faqs/ami-aptio-v-vs-core...

The AMI UEFI firmware behaves like most UEFI firmwares these days and locks out writes to firmware flash after boot and only allows updates by way of efi files being dropped into place and then updated via reboot with signature check.

The coreboot setup leaves writes to the firmware flash open and root can use flashrom at anytime.

This makes for security trade-offs, a choice between freedom to change your own firmware and know what you're running vs a mechanism to reduce the chance of advanced persistent threat at the firmware level.

Also, their build to order model under additional OSes does include Windows 10 as an option at an additional cost, so I imagine a UEFI firmware is required.


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