OutOfMemory
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Activity: 1834
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Man who stares at charts (and stars, too...)
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June 21, 2020, 12:10:23 AM |
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I'm also in IT but a mere technician. Pretty boring. I could get a better degree through night classes, or continue to hone my skills and certifications (started the Cisco routing & switching course) but I'm not sure I really want to do either.
Network administration is just a lot less creative kind of IT work. I liked it until i mastered it, as long it was interesting food for my hungry mind...
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Toxic2040
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Activity: 1834
Merit: 4197
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June 21, 2020, 12:32:05 AM |
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the evening wall report A good day for hodlers as bitcoin closes at $$9,355.46 with decent volatility but low volume. accumulate, buy the dips and hodl...its all I got today but after 7+ years still seems to be working #dyor 1h  0.236 resistance at $9.43k and then top of cloud at $9.46k to find sunlight 4h  saved from a twist mid-July as a spigot starts to form D  #stronghands
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sirazimuth
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born once atheist
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June 21, 2020, 12:44:06 AM |
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I'm also in IT but a mere technician. Pretty boring. I could get a better degree through night classes, or continue to hone my skills and certifications (started the Cisco routing & switching course) but I'm not sure I really want to do either.
Network administration is just a lot less creative kind of IT work. I liked it until i mastered it, as long it was interesting food for my hungry mind... Our network administrator IT dude (or wtf his title is ) is pretty talented actually. He knows how to turn it off and turn it on again....
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sirazimuth
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Activity: 3626
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born once atheist
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June 21, 2020, 01:16:58 AM |
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John Oliver nails it again.I'd be curious to know how many folks around here have actually been tested. I haven't but I plan to. I'm actually wondering if I had or actually even have this thing. Asymptomatic, etc. Stay safe everyone and get tested....And yeah, I know for us yanks, easier said than done..... but it phukking shouldn't be. Well I finally got tested. The irony being when I tried to get tested by signing up online, I was disqualified because I was not a public health worker, firefighter, police officer and I did not show symptoms. Wtf? I would have thought being asymptomatic is reason to get tested to make sure you are not unknowingly spreading it. If I had symptoms I wouldn't bother getting tested as I'd just assume I had it and take appropriate measures. Anyway I did a routine doctor visit for something unrelated. and guess what ? I got tested..... Negative.
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LUCKMCFLY
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Activity: 2702
Merit: 1883
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
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June 21, 2020, 01:27:19 AM |
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It is a good time to continue in Hodl mode! Daily profit for HODLING BTC since 2013 Data taken since 29/10/2018 @ 10:45am (UTC) Updated every hour #bitcoin #btc #cryptocurrency #blockchain #cryptotrade #profit #digitalmine  Source: https://twitter.com/digital_mine_/status/1274487210646044672
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CryptoYar
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June 21, 2020, 02:34:24 AM |
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Only 3.5 million or 19% of the circulating supply is traded in the crypto market, and the rest of the circulating supply of bitcoins is strongly held by the people. And another 20% bitcoin circulating supply is probably lost, it is because of the death of investors or missing private keys. Source: News.bitcoin.com
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lightfoot
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I fix broken miners. And make holes in teeth :-)
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June 21, 2020, 02:38:28 AM |
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Yeah I'd have to agree with Torque: IT is really starting to suck. Cloud makes it worse, now you have no control, no real input, and all the responsibility when your vendor fucks up. Which they do and their answer is "so? who gives a fuck, send us that money".
Coupling that with the bullshit of making cloud "op/ex" which means it competes with staff for money. And when that "op/ex" is really a 3 year commitment with minimums that can't be lowered without massive penalties, the only choice is to fuck the workers. Sounds like cap/ex to me, but that's yet another way they fuck you.
Go back to the past, the future is not what it used to be....
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Tash
Sr. Member
  
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Merit: 305
Pro financial, medical liberty
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June 21, 2020, 04:06:18 AM |
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So there have been some coin shortages in recent times, in a drama theater just around the corner 
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Arriemoller
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Cлaвa Укpaїнi!
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Hi guys
long time no see. Hope everybody is well, I will not try and catch up, have read the last couple of pages tho. I have been down the rabbit hole of power tools, I decided to give the battery powered ones a try now that batteries have improved, I hated the older type batteries that would die on you in like a year. I ended up buying some Makita copies from China and some third party high capacity batteries and a knock of double charger. All for a third or less of the price of the original. I also bought some rather unexpensive stuff named Meec, from a local chain that's supposed to be good. And now I'm working on building a converter so I can use the Makita batteries in those (Meec) tools. A mans got to have a hobby.
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Arriemoller
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Activity: 2310
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Cлaвa Укpaїнi!
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June 21, 2020, 04:15:16 AM |
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VB1001
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<<CypherPunkCat>>
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June 21, 2020, 05:46:50 AM |
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VB1001
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<<CypherPunkCat>>
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June 21, 2020, 05:56:10 AM Last edit: June 21, 2020, 06:50:37 AM by VB1001 |
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JayJuanGee
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Self-Custody is a right. Say no to "non-custodial"
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June 21, 2020, 06:12:18 AM Last edit: June 21, 2020, 06:31:06 AM by JayJuanGee |
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I have some troubles with understanding that article, VB1001, and the points of the article sinking in because the objectives that they are describing seem to be a fools errand to attempt to spot manipulation or to avoid it. Just crazy... and I would likely go crazy or something close to crazy if I were to attempt to try to achieve those seemingly impossible objectives of spotting and avoiding manipulation. Instead what I do, and I even recommend that others attempt some variation of what I do (I suppose that is why I talk about my strategy so much... hahahahaha), and that is to attempt to take advantage of likely inevitable BTC price manipulation about whatever is the price direction and don't hardly give two fucks about whether you can see such manipulation or not or even whether such manipulation exists. Of course, you are not in as great of a position to take advantage of such seemingly inevitable manipulation if you are still in a BTC accumulation phase because when you are in a BTC accumulation phase you just want to continue to buy BTC on an ongoing basis, no matter what until you reach your target accumulation objective (or something close to your target accumulation objective - especially if you are young you might consider yourself to be accumulating on a pretty long term basis because it takes a long time to stack sats, whether 1 sat at a time or some more aggressive variation), so one of the main ways to take advantage of the seemingly inevitable manipulation is attempting to buy on BTC price dips.. but don't get too worked up if the BTC price ends up getting manipulated upwardly rather than downwardly because you just would be regularly buying anyhow.. whether that is daily, weekly, monthly or some other variation. Once you achieve a bit of an over-accumulation the quantity of BTC that you would like to achieve (and perhaps maintain), then once you are in a kind of over accumulation status (feeling, perhaps?), you should not mind shaving off a bit of BTC when the BTC price is manipulated up because 1) you have already over accumulated and 2) if the BTC price gets manipulated down at some later unknown time, then you have a bit of extrafiat (no skin off your back) in which to buy some more of king daddy. In the longer and maybe even medium run (even though something as short as the medium run could take a few years to play out) most of us have a pretty high level of confidence that the BTC price are going to go up.. just that the going up is not regular even in the short to medium, too... but we have a decent amount of confidence that the longer tha you zoom out the more likely the BTC price is trending up, even if just the bottoms rather than the tops seem to be inching up here and there in a slow motion feeling, but the medium to longer roads in bitcoinlandia do continue to seem to have great likelihoods of trending up... So, having all this good stuff working in your favor (if you happen to be a BTC accumulator and HODLer) why get all worked up about attempting to spot or to avoid BTC price manipulation when you realize that BTC price manipulation is almost inevitable too, you just cannot really know what direction, for how long or to what degree.. so why waste psychological or financial fuel in that direction except to just keep your system? I think that I have kind of described my presumption problems with that article, which is that I cannot really get the point of attempting to achieve what they are suggesting to work on which is the spotting and avoiding of manipulation.. which just seems to be a selfie-destructive approach to both your psychology and likely your finances, too... fuck the manipulators.. who fucking cares.. let them do what they are going to do... doesn't matter because your system already accounts for them while realizing that there is only so much that they can do about the ongoingly likely BTC price trend, UPpity.
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VB1001
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<<CypherPunkCat>>
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June 21, 2020, 06:48:27 AM Merited by JayJuanGee (1) |
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I have some troubles with understanding that article, VB1001, and the points of the article sinking in because the objectives that they are describing seem to be a fools errand to attempt to spot manipulation or to avoid it.
Well, maybe, the hidden walls. 
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AlcoHoDL
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Addicted to HoDLing!
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June 21, 2020, 07:11:03 AM |
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Nice discussion! Just too many things happening IRL that I can only skim through the posts, let alone replying... Calling yourself a wage slave for too long means you really need to change something in your life. Not all people can achieve getting enjoyment from work. Some are incapable, others lazy, others just unlucky, although I don't really believe luck can fully define someone. One can make his/her own luck in life, or he/she falls into the "incapable" category. But at least you've got to try. If you fail, try again, and if you fail again, maybe you're not able to do it, or you need to re-evaluate your goals, and Bitcoin can help in such cases, but not everyone is in this situation. Not everyone is a wage slave.
True. But the actual work of one's career can also change drastically over time, to become much less meaningful. For example, when I first got into IT programming in the mid 90's, the work was actually very meaningful and fun. We were building business software applications from complete scratch, and there was a sense of passion, creativity and analysis in what I was doing day to day. Programmers could use their brains to bang out code to build custom use cases and custom UIs, were respected and revered, and got paid accordingly for their creative analysis and technical knowledge. By the time I got out of that career in the 2010's, IT programmers were reduced to simply integrating off-the-shelf, expensive closed-source software into existing business environments. They essentially became glorified software "babysitters", having to spend their days trying to integrate and debug software that was poorly-written by someone else, often with poor performance, poor configuration, archaic APIs, missing or incomplete documentation, lack of expertise, etc. And these software integrations were often initiated under ridiculous time schedules and low/inadequate budgets, with use-case and performance expectations that could not be met in the time allotted. Or ever. It became soul-crushing work, and I started having bouts of anxiety and depression that I never had in the beginning of my IT career. What the IT career became in the end, was not something I had signed up for in the beginning. So I got out.I hear you, and I agree. I'm also involved in s/w (mostly f/w) development, as part of my embedded designs, to which I also design the h/w. It's Sunday and I'm currently working on a driver for a project. A driver that was supposed to be ready and available for me to use as part of a ready-made SDK library. Well, it "kind of" works. But in my line of work, "kind of" is unacceptable. Little things like not strictly adhering to timing specifications and thus causing it to fail when communicating with certain rare ICs, or not being flexible enough to do exactly what I want, have forced me to design my own driver. As with most things, if you want to do it right, do it yourself. I see this as a blessing in disguise though. I enjoy diving deep into the h/w and writing bare metal f/w for it. So, the lack of quality s/w libraries/drivers gives me an opportunity to do exactly that. Sounds like I'm a masochist, but I do enjoy low-level programming, as it improves my understanding of the h/w and makes it much easier to debug or extend my design's functionality. My employer believes in me and has given me total freedom to manage my projects, so I can decide on what approach to take in my designs. And I take the purist approach, i.e., if it doesn't work as it should, write/design it yourself from scratch. Having to work on poorly written s/w, having to integrate it into my projects, no, I would avoid it at all costs. It's going to be a hell of a mess to maintain and upgrade, and probably won't perform as good as a project that was designed from the ground up. There is a cost to designing everything yourself though, which is that development may take longer than expected, but this is OK with me and my employer, so I take my time. And the quality of the final design more than makes up for it. "So I got out", you said. That's what I mean by not being a wage slave. You saw that you were becoming one, so you decided to change things. Wage slavery is when you are afraid to make changes and endure a life of misery by spending half your life doing things you don't want to do, especially when you know you can do much better. I consider myself blessed in that respect, because I'm currently getting paid very well to do things so interesting and exciting that I would gladly pay for to do. But if things go south and I feel I need to change something, I will certainly try to change it.
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Last of the V8s
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Be a bank
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June 21, 2020, 07:58:33 AM Merited by JayJuanGee (1) |
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.... Just too many things happening IRL that I can only skim through the posts, let alone replying...
same. will catch up soon. meanwhile  @sassal0x
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AlcoHoDL
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Addicted to HoDLing!
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June 21, 2020, 10:10:31 AM |
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.... Just too many things happening IRL that I can only skim through the posts, let alone replying...
same. will catch up soon. meanwhile  @sassal0x Poor girl. She must be thinking you're a perverted farmer who can't spell "sex"...
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psycodad
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精神分析的爸
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Thinking about changing to linux soon. -ish. Before the next windows version, at the latest. Long time e-friend nerd recommended linux mint. Looks user friendly. Anyone using it? Can recommend/not recommend?
If you're planning to go with Linux I'd recommend to stick with the big guys: CentOS, Debian, Ubuntu. They all have decent support, wide choice of GUIs, they're pretty stable and secure. Also less likely to have compatibility issues... in short: avoid exotic distros <systemd-rant> And they all got systemd, ready to bite your ass anytime (quicker and harder than Windows ever did). If you're on Windows 10 you already run a Linux kernel with a Microsoft window manager on top. I only use Devuan or OpenBSD on new machines, just too many times I needed to reboot when pre-systemd a kill -9 <pid> did the job. Which is one of countless reasons why systemd sucks. For people not being familiar with the famous works of Lennart Poettering he basically is constantly reinventing (and integrating into the systemd mess) components that had been proven working for decades in Linux world and that didn't need any fixing in the first place (i.e. the fabulous crond is now systemd-timer shit, not even talking about systemd-homed madness). At least he's got a pwnie award...: https://pwnies.com/archive/2017/winners/#lamestvendor</systemd-rant> If you want freedom, security and control over your system, avoid systemd. Otherwise be prepared to adapt your way of working with your computer to how LP envisions you to work with it.
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