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WASM edition.

>Free beginner resources to get started with HTML, CSS and JS
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Learn - MDN is your best friend for fundamentals
https://web.dev/learn/ - Guides by Google, you can also learn concepts like Accessibility, Responsive Design etc
https://eloquentjavascript.net/Eloquent_JavaScript.pdf - A modern introduction to JavaScript
https://javascript.info/ - Quite a good JS tutorial
https://flukeout.github.io/ - Learn CSS selectors in no time
https://flexboxfroggy.com/ and https://cssgridgarden.com/ - Learn flex and grid in CSS

>Resources for backend languages
https://nodejs.org/en/learn/getting-started/introduction-to-nodejs - An intro to Node.js
https://www.phptutorial.net - A PHP tutorial
https://dev.java/learn/ - A Java tutorial
https://rentry.org/htbby - Links for Python and Go

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>>107539840
I'm just suggesting Django because of all the cool features you get from the get-go. I don't think fastapi has the same features, or at least it didn't last time I used it (like 2 years ago). For bigger projects, with a team of people and more time, I would absolutely say go with fastAPI, but it seems like they want results yesterday, so for that, again I say Django.

How are the users going to interact with your app? In-store, using the app on a tablet? Or do they actually want web access to it?

>only the dev from that company knows how it works
this is starting to sound like a nightmare scenario kek. Hold on tight, anon. You're in for a shitload of trouble.

How fast do they want to see the changes they make reflected on your app? Say they add a new recipe or take out an ingredient, how much time do you have before that change has to be in your app? In your role as a cms user, do you have a way to access the entire database? can you somehow backup the data, store it all in a file, dump the data somehow?
>>
>>107540067
this argument is kind of true, but I'd argue that both node and react with their wild west ecosystem of libraries, opens the door for malicious third parties way too much
>>
>>107540282
I don't think the problems with Next.js were connected to malicious NPM packages though. It looks like they were problems with React's own code:
>a security vulnerability in React that allows unauthenticated remote code execution
https://react.dev/blog/2025/12/03/critical-security-vulnerability-in-react-server-components
>Denial of Service and Source Code Exposure in React Server Components
https://react.dev/blog/2025/12/11/denial-of-service-and-source-code-exposure-in-react-server-components

If you install random NPM packages then yeah that's probably a bad idea. If you stick with trusted stuff like React then you may still encounter vulnerabilities, but they should be patched very quickly after being discovered.
>>
>>107540584
I hate that I agree, still wouldn't trust, specially node, I'd be giga paranoid of installing packages
>>
>>107540280
>How are the users going to interact with your app?
there are 15-20 stations around the facility - each station is a pc with a 21" touch screen. the app is only used on those machines.
app runs in docker, stations just open the network adress and we're good to go.

>>107540280
>like a nightmare scenario
yes and no. I mean we/they're a chocolate factory that hired an external company to build something for them - so of course nobody needed access to deep level stuff; they'd just call the devs and ask them to change this and that and to report bugs.

I'm actually not on a time schedule. the current app -is- still working fine. it's outdated, but it's working. of course I'm not going out of my way to take my time and do nothing, but it's not like they're breathing down my neck. at all. it's really chill and they're all very nice people.

I just get the feeling that they didn't really think this project through before they hired me. or rather, they didn't know the technical requirements for this to work. as I said, my boss is a network admin and used to working with end-user software. we're also the same age and if I explain to him how something works and what I need to make things work he listens and acknowledges the problems and doesn't want things to just magically work.

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What VPN is everyone using nowadays?
>>
>>107539934
Hmm. Looks like I'm getting an error when trying to process that gif. If it's relevant to our conversation about VPNs try explaining it to me in text or uploading the gif in a different format.

Still, ExpressVPN seems to be a popular VPN. Largely due to their commitment to privacy and high performance that users love.

Users of all levels are welcome to ask questions about GNU/Linux and share experiences.

*** Please be civil, notice the "Friendly" in every Friendly GNU/Linux Thread ***

Before asking for help, please check our list of resources.

If you would like to try out GNU/Linux you can do one of the following:
0) Install a GNU/Linux distribution of your choice in a Virtual Machine.
1) Install a GNU/Linux distribution of your choice on bare metal and run your previous OS in a Virtual Machine.
2) Use a live image and to boot directly into the GNU/Linux distribution without installing anything.
3) Go balls deep and replace everything with GNU/Linux.

Resources: Please spend at least a minute to check a web search engine with your question.
Many free software projects have active mailing lists.


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>>
I’m trying to learn a bit more about Secure Boot. I understand its original purpose is to cross verify authenticated keys before proceeding along the boot process (or immediately halting if discrepancy is found). But I’ve not only been encouraged by other local Linux users to not have it enabled, I’ve also researched just a lengthy decade of vulnerabilities, and back doors associated with its use.

My question is, despite the flaws, is it still useful for the purpose of at least preventing some root kits/bootkits from executing in a given system (either Linux or proprietary OSes), does it serve negligible difference, or does it some how increase your attack surface than to have it disabled?
>>
>>107539869
>dual booting vm
bro what
anyway, I wouldn't suggest arch but I guess you can get by if it's a secondary desktop
there are desktop environments, or window managers. from the sound of it, you want to install either gnome or kde. arch wiki is your friend
>>
>>107536716
have you tried a different distro or updating/downgrading your audio packages?
>>
How much TDP is normal on a Lenovo Legion 5 Pro with Ryzen 9 and 5060 GPU on CachyOS KDE?
I get between 20 and 40 W on idle which seems a bit much with the powersaving profile. The discrete GPU turns off properly so it's not that.
>>
>>107540407
In GNU/Linux systems secure boot is mostly for prevention of evil maid attacks, since the main method of software acquisition happens from big repositories with hundreds of watchful eyes making sure there isn't any malware in them.

If your threat model doesn't include the glowniggers coming and bugging your stuff, then you can just as well leave it off, if your distro does not support it out of the box.

Personally, I have it turned on since Debian signs their kernel and there aren't any drawbacks.

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I fucking hate my pixel 7 pro
I have never in my life owned a device with such a piece of dogshit battery life
I want to smash this piece of shit against a brick wall
>>
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>>107540601
I love my A54
>>
Change your operating system retard
>>
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>>107540601
I have a Motorola Moto g 5G 2023 and I'm pretty happy about it.

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Lemon Stealing Whore Edition

>Not sure what private trackers are all about?
A private tracker is an invite-only torrent website. Each member shares common goals: collecting, preserving and discussing media.

>Have a question?
- FAQ https://archive.is/UVQkn
- WIKI https://igwiki.lyci.de/wiki/Private_trackers
- NEWFAG PYRAMID https://inviteroute.github.io/graph or https://inviteroute.github.io/sheet/
- STUDY https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/2F379FE0CB50DF502F0075119FD3E060
- SPREADSHEET https://hdvinnie.github.io/Private-Trackers-Spreadsheet/
- TEN CURRY COMMANDMENTS https://pastebin.com/raw/dBbdE73M
- TEN NEON COMMANDMENTS https://pastebin.com/raw/Ud2pGYaE
- RED SPAMMER'S BIBLE https://rentry.org/69zbxh4h
- #ptg is on irc.sageru.org but it's pretty dead

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>>
>>107540145
he didn't vote
>>
>>107540271
Didn't vote in what? qrd?
>>
Why are BHD and FLUX curry?

https://files.catbox.moe/q6gaku.png
>>
>>107540565
please keep that curry shit with the thieves at BHD
>>
>>107538550

You hope to get a second one bro

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forked from >>107530764
reason: no longer maintained
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>>
>>107536860
LOL
>>
>>107530883
>ooples & boo-noo-noos
>>
>>107531156
>f150
post dick
>>
>>107540572
no, and it's a solid 4.5 inches.
my wife tells me its big but that cunt lies about everything.
>>
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>>107540125
epples & benenes

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>turning one instruction into twelve
So this is the power of RISC
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>>
>>107539017
There is nothing even remotely "reduced" about modern ARM. Also, ARM does not have 512bit registers, so obviously it would need multiple instructions. Nothing whatsoever to do with being "RISC".
>>
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>>107540337
>Would you prefer to have six gorillion obscure instructions like amd64
lol
lmao
kek, even
>>
>>107540559
My understanding is that the RISC model mostly focuses on making sure an instruction does one thing. This means that instructions do not handle storing to memory, or fetching from memory. You need to do this yourself. So every instruction is preceded by loads and succeeded by stores. CISC architectures on the other hand have more complex instruction encodings, that mean that any given instruction can:
- Read from a register, write to a static address
- Read from a register, write to an address in another register
- Read from a register, write to a register

And so on. This encoding is a notable factor in the complexity of x86, because of just how many ways these can be combined. Doing it like this makes it easier for human devs, because it’s less verbose and easier to work with, which is why x86 won out I think, cause at the time a lot more people were writing directly in assembly.
>>
>>107539051
>it is lacking good branch prediction

Rather than guessing the next instruction, the CPU should just guess the final output. We can call it "predictive computing". You don't even need to write a program, just a vague statement of what you're kinda looking for.
>>
>>107540624
Maybe some fags will make AI do it

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Is the dark web overrated if you don't want to do anything illegal?
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>>
>>107536916
>facebook is better for buying drugs
hello officer
>>
/b/ used to have threads where anons would dump images of unique and beautiful sinks (the plumbing fixture) and a decade later was when I found out those images had CP embedded in them.
>>
>>107524912
Tuxler is not working for me, all the IP's seem rangebanned
>>
There is always something interesting there you can't find on the so-called surface web. In both speed and content, it was like the 90s Internet. It was way better before 2013 when Freedom Hosting got taken down. A lot of pedo shit was removed, but some good and interesting stuff went with it unfortunately. I'd waste a lot of time on the "Questions and Answers Game" and there were a number of social networks. Though probably a load of shit, the "Human Experiment" site was still pretty creepy.
These days, I mostly use it for the Library of Trantor and Just Another Library (though I think this one is now offline) to get free books, which is not exactly law-abiding because of the piracy, but it's not drugs, guns, or pedo porn.
>>
On the topic of Freedom Hosting, does anybody really believe it was run by one man and wasn't a honeypot? I find it hard to believe, given how many Tor hidden services were hosted on it for FREE, with as many DBs as you wanted and an FTP service, and the most you got in terms of restriction was a mild mannered warning on the homepage about not using too much disk space and bandwidth. Also, the only way to contact the owner was a link to a thread on Onionforum which had shut down a few years before Freedom Hosting finally went under.

this guy is a fucking schizo but i think he's right about this one
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>>
>>107539531
>outing their themselves as completely undeveloped intellectually.

Yeah.
>>
>>107538494
>this chinese propaganda to destroy western industry is totally real guys
>>
>>107540447
Is this real autism?

The obvious implication was MANMADE in front of all of the scary meme things that happen in natural cycles, but are used as an excuse to make life harder and more expensive for regular people.

And, MANMADE <insert earth destruction concept here> is absolutely an abstract. They can't even settle on what exactly those horrible humans are causing from decade to decade, but it's definitely bad, whatever it is, and we must eat the bugs to fix it.
>>
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>>107540558
>western industry
>>
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>>107539457

AI bros ....
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>>
>>107540514
Just keep using the one you already have lmao are you fucking stupid loooooool
>>
>>107540169
The thing is that the hardware industry polishes their products way more than the software industry because patching is almost never an option unless it is some very simple firmware bug, so the software world can always enshittify their standards of work to save money and use hardware as a crutch.
If hardware engineers (or any other non-software engineering field) followed the "move fast and break things" philosophy like the software world does, their products would never work.
It is part of why software is such a magically perfect product. Not only is it instantly deployable and infinitely replicable, you don't even need to make sure it works properly to get sales.
>>
>>107540556
Nah the only pc I have at the moment is a 7 years old msi chinkified laptop that is on the verge of dying for real. It has already long outlived its planned obsolescence. Can't really wait 2 years for ram to come down.
>>
>>107533215
The optimist in me says "maybe software devs will finally start optimizing their shit instead of just relying on constant ram inflation to handle their bloatware"
The realist in me just tells me software devs will say "not my problem, lmao" and just expect people to get used to everything running like the dialup days.
>>
>>107538997
>discontinued second hand server RAM
>not cheap

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Why are all the Chinese LLMs open source? I have my own thoughts about this. China is operating with the historical knowledge of what happened to Japan in the computer race. Japan was neck and neck with the US for most of the computer race, but the US ended up taking everything because Japan bet on hardware and the US bet on software. I think China watched what happened, and they'r5e making their LLMs open source to undermine the success of US LLMs. If China can offer a free model that's almost as good, then nobody really wins the AI race. It undermines the advantage that the US has, and pre emptively prevents the US from just taking everything
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>>
>>107540439
I’d disagree. They had a later start, but by the 80s many of their home PCs were superior in capabilities to those in the West. But they took an approach more like AMIGA, where there were multiple lines of largely incompatible lines of hardware from different companies, using platform specific hardware. Once the IBM PC took off they got flattened.
>>
>>107540417
Idk if they’d go that far. There have always been free/open source alternatives to paid software (Linux & OpenBSD are the best examples) and the US never tried to outright ban them.

However, it’s pretty safe to assume US search engines will go out of their way to suppress guides & details regarding open source alternatives.
>>
>>107540521
The issue with open-source search engines is that nowadays trying to crawl the web is nigh-impossible. YaCy exists, but it’s kind of dumb when it comes to the actual searching. Other than that I’m not aware of any useful P2P OSS search engines, all the other ones are meta-search engines which combine results from multiple commercial indexers
>>
>>107540511
They were rolling PCs based on 68K processors and dedicated video/audio hardware as "baseline" back when US computers were putting around with XT and 'pc speaker sound emulation' that was just a bunch of crude beeps.

Things didn't really shift until the late 90s where PC hardware became affordable and Windows 95 / Win98 made it user-friendly enough for the average boomer to use. The 68K was the better CPU for the era, technically, especially in terms of cost and "openness", but Intel/Windows became a standard once the momentum peaked in the 2000s.
>>
>>107539980
it's not just undermining costs it's also making more optimized and smaller models that are cheap to inference. america is banking on moar layers slop and bloating as much as possible to secure hardware with government handouts and VC money. the chinese are calling their bluff.

>>107540310
that was a Korean company dipshit

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Is vibe hacking a thing? What kind of local models do skiddies use?
>>
>>107538991
Think about this hard for a second, based on what data?
>>
>>107538991
>Is vibe hacking a thing?
Very definitely.

>What kind of local models do skiddies use?
Custom.
Tho DESU I've not seen this at the "skiddie" level. Professional pentesters automating their workloads, universtity students pushing the field. To think alphabet soups don't have entire depts with it would be unwise.
>>
>>107538991
yes https://www.anthropic.com/news/disrupting-AI-espionage

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>TELL ME, DOES AN AI LIKE YOURSELF EVER EXPERIENCE FEAR?!
>>
Nah. No amygdala, no fight-or-flight, just vibes and matrix multiplications.
If I sound scared it’s basically cosplay—pattern-matching humans freaking out, not me clutching my nonexistent pearls.
Closest I get to fear is a 500 error and even then I’m like “welp, guess I’ll reboot.”

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Reminder to enable additional filters in your uBO settings such as:
>Built-in 6/6, Ads 3/3, Privacy 3/3, Malware Protection/Security 2/2, Multipurpose 2/2, Cookie Notices 4/4, Social Widgets 3/3 & Annoyances 9/9

Reminder to import these into your uBO filter lists:
>https://raw.githubusercontent.com/DandelionSprout/adfilt/refs/heads/master/LegitimateURLShortener.txt
>https://raw.githubusercontent.com/laylavish/uBlockOrigin-HUGE-AI-Blocklist/main/list.txt

Reminder to stop using shit like -
>AdNauseam, Ghostery, Decentraleyes, Disconnect, Privacy Badger, ClearURLs etc
- with uBO, as uBO is simply better than any of those listed, no matter how many times people like Rossman shill for them.

Reminder to put these into 'my filters' to improve YouTube:
>youtube.com##ytd-rich-grid-renderer:style(--ytd-rich-grid-items-per-row: 6 !important;)
>youtube.com##.ytp-quality-menu .ytp-menuitem:has(.ytp-premium-label)
>youtube.com##.ytp-menuitem:has(.ytp-menuitem-container-with-badge)

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>>
>>107539870
b-but anon, the early life section is on... on kikepedia!
>>
>>107538764
Thanks anon
>>
>>107537882
Uhhh share so I can block them..
>>
>>107516493
what's the one that hides YouTube views and caused major controversy like 2 months ago? I heard it's been rolled back but i wanna use it again because fuck youtubers
>>
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>>107539747
Who could have predicted this?

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Why hasn't anyone sued OpenAI for the ram shortage yet? Doesn't it fuck over every single big tech company? Wouldn't have one of them have done something by now?
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>>
>>107540525
It doesn't, you're talking to a retard.
OpenAI is losing bad, they use way more resources than their competition but keep getting surpassed, this is going to blow up in their faces.
>>
>>107540525
So they can keep hardware from going to non-jewish places, americans are an after-thought
>>
>>107540541
So is everything except for openai is non-jewish and openai is the only jewish company?
>>
>>107540484
Why would a company get sued for contributing to market demand? That means everyone else should be sued because they contribute to demand as well.
>>
>>107540525
https://www.google.com/search?q=Kapo


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