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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: March 30th, 2024

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  • Ugh, that sucks. Depending on how high the damage goes you can potentially sister the joists though. Cut out the damaged section, replace with new stud, then put a secondary stud that spans past the seam. You’ll use more lumber that way (most likely) but the benefit is you don’t have to rip open the entire wall.
    Obviously there’s a break point where that stops making sense, bit that’s all in how far the damage goes up and if its literally evey stud or not.





  • The clarify, they said to get rid of all that stuff from OTHER peoples devices. The point being that you’re not the weakest link in this chain.

    To illustrate, I have a phone number for less than a year that maybe 20 people have. All friends and family. I still had a sales call on it who was targeted and addressed me by name.



  • I’m going to second the comment to leave well enough alone. Do NOT mess with your machine if its what makes you money.

    I know you commented you don’t have funds for a second computer to test with but that really is the best step for you.

    This is especially regarding some of your other details. You are not in for a quick and smooth transition (sorry to say).

    VSTs are “sort of” supported on Linux. Basically they’re not and there are work arounds that I haven’t done using wine for compatibility.

    I run a virtual machine for the windows software I am reliant on. So basically my Photoshop etc I use Affinity in a windows VM and it works fine. Depending if you get intensive with your work you might need a lot of resources or experience lag. But for the most part it should be fine. Look into virt-manager for your VM if you want to go that route.

    Besides the VST issue, audio recording will probably give you additiinal problems. I haven’t delved into it because he rabbit hole went too deep for me, but from what I’ve read there tends to be issues with audio in VMs (tremendous lag for one).

    But all that being said, there should be a solution for all of your needs. It probably won’t be straight forward though given your use cases. I don’t want to sound negative with my warnings, I just want to make sure you don’t shoot yourself in the foot with your work.


  • I’m sure as hell not defending him, but your point is valid and why him being against them having missiles isn’t necessarily a contradiction. “Them” isn’t the same them that he sold to. Again, not defending him and I haven’t listen to anything he’s said recently to know his stance (nor do I really care to), but just keeping my own logic in check.



  • I’m similarly testing Proton at the moment. I tried it at launch, and it was…less than impressive. It worked, but was lacking some features (the details of which I don’t quite remember) and they didn’t have a separate password for Pass vs the rest of their app suite which was a deal breaker for me (which of course they have now).

    Testing it now, I’m liking the experience better than Bitwarden overall. There’s some idiosyncrasies between the two I prefer over the other, but nothing deal breaking.

    I haven’t found a reason to not switch over, other than the “all eggs in one basket” argument, which is valid but I think I’m OK with.



  • As far as I’m aware there shouldnt be any differences between the two. I’d say buy the phone your budget allows for. Personally I spent more by getting he 256gig model because the storage was worth it to me. So basically my advice is buy older but spend the difference on meaningful storage.

    Depending on your threat model you may wish to buy second hand or buying with cash so the IMEI isn’t tied to your name.

    I initially struggled with the zero google because many apps didn’t work. I ran a secondary profile with google services running for those. Recently, due to another comment here on Lemmy I retried those apps (with exploit compatibility on) and most of them worked. So I’ve ditched the secondary profile. My point being, that most apps will probably work but if they don’t you always have the option of a secondary profile.




  • I never played Revelations 2 so can’t comment on your question about the story. I will say that you should try to play RE5 if you can. Yeah, being Chris kind of sucks and I always chose Sheva if I had the chance to. But the game is really fun. Yeah, it’s more action than horror but it’s a super fun game and one of my favorites. Definitely better with a friend but the AI is good enough to help out and heal you when needed.


  • Yeah, I’m already running opnsense on an old PC with an added network card. Then I use Unbound DNS with various blacklist filters on my outbound traffic.

    It honestly seems good enough because I monitored it for a while when I set it up. But I don’t monitor it continually and I don’t have specific blocks that I set up myself, just the published blacklists. If something new is phoning home I’d be unaware until I check it, which is what I like about your setup.





  • I would highly recommend this as I did something similar. I ran Linux on an older machine separate from my main machine. I did so for about 10 months. Plus I built out a gaming machine for somebody and set up another old machine as a media center, both with Linux.

    I finally made the 100% switch just a few months ago. I bought a new M.2 drive and swapped out just like you are planning. I really needed to make sure I had no hitches for work purposes. I haven’t even considered swapping back (though in full transparency I have Windows running on a VM for some apps that I can’t get in Linux)