Do you /g/uys know of any source, where I could be able to find docs for obsolete military tech, like radars? I am especially interested in old Soviet radars and missiles with early passive or active radar homing (like S-200 Vega).Schematics, blueprints, whitepapers, etc., everything is welcome
>>106873915Archive.org, maybe some hobbyist forums like radio amateurs. You need go around a bit.
>>106873915Also, there's this game about SAM,https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KF2SOvV5vW8It probably has tons of information.
>>106873952I feel like getting info about this on "american" internet is much harder than browsing some random russian forums etc., but even tho I can read cyrillic and vaguely understand Russian, I am not ready for that place :D >>106873961holy shit that's the nerdiest coolest software I have seen, tysm
>the audiophiles were rightgoddamnit. why did i wait so long
>>106872907No, we know the HD600 is garbage. You mentioned Audeze planars. Leagues above.
>>106873194And they're wrong. I use +40 year old headphones that are the complete opposite of muddy and bad. But don't tell them. More for me.
>>106873207Yes and they do measure really well especially considering you get them for like 50 bux at this point and they are better than HD600, but we were talking about the people that think simply getting one of those and slapping a Harman EQ on top gets you to endgame and anything more expensive than that is snake oil.
>muddyI'm in the opposite camp, I think they could be warmer than they are.
HD650+oratory EQ+topping DXLaudio endgame, anything more than this is placebo and/or bloat
youtube stopped working for me (yet again)
Why is everyone involved in Software Development either Indian or Brazilian?
>>106873790Because there's a major incentive to get a remote job in the first world when you're in a third world shithole where you can live like a king on another country's minimum wage
>>106873790SOPA
>Why do i keep spamming this kind of retarded thread?https://desuarchive.org/g/search/text/either%20Indian%20or%20Brazilian/type/op/
That will be 20k British Pounds plus 100 tip for every day of no compliance Mr. 4chan.
>>106873773that's what they will do once 4chan refuses to payplus put pressure on every business that deals with 4chan like coinbase (4chan uses this for crypto payments) to drop 4chancoinbase will drop 4chan because they actually have more important business in the UK than some neet website
>>106873773countries have many reciprocal laws and laws which can be called on by foreign/outside parties. not everywhere and i would guess the USA 1A trumps everything. i worked for a hong kong company and we had EU GDPR things we had to follow even though the EU had no jurisdiction there were HK regulations which enforced the EU GDPR and made some of it applicable. this was not direct HK GDPR but a reciprocal "EU passed a law and you have responsibilities under X and Y". ignoring 4chan is american, the UK law does reach farther than the UK border because countries join together to fuck people.
>>106873773The blue boards should be fine, just do it like 4channel used to do and hide the NSFW boards
>>106873750Reminder this law is weighted in favour of big social media platforms which is where kids are seeing all the harmful content and small platforms like 4chan and regular old forums are suffering because the big guys can bribe/comply their way through all the additional costs and kill all the competition.
>>106873805>that's what they will do once 4chan refuses to payAnd that's what'll happen. The UK is free to block 4chan if they want, but 4chan isn't a company within UK jurisdiction.
Can China save technology?
>>106864396China could not even figure out condoms...
>>106872015They did figure them out a little too hard and now they're actually facing the same population aging issues most western countries struggle with, only intensified a thousandfold due to how effective they were. That and also a surplus of 10+ million Chinese men that will never see pussy in their life.
>>106872000>what can I use them for>you can use it like GPIO pinsyou're not answering the Man, anon
>>106872000ok... so is there some convenient open sauce library that treats legacy paralel ports as GPIO pins to turn on leds or something or do I have to mess with ancient documentation in some archive.org repo to make that work?
>>106867203Japs started the same way and were about to btfo mutt technology till you fuckwits imposed plaza accord.
Linus, Brodie and all other onions redditors are completely in the wrong, as usual.When you have high IQ talented people, like Elon Musk, Drew Devault, or, indeed, Kent Overstreet, who want to move fast, you LET them develop at their own pace. You don't cripple them just to appease low performersThat is the problem with the Linux kernel, everything moves at the speed of the weakest (slowest) chain, and Linus is too dumb to understand that those slowest chains are the problem, not the excellent programmers like Kent Overstreet who are just leagues ahead in terms of IQ.Linus not understanding this is why Linux is still subpar to proprietary on many fronts, despite massive funding and corporate involvement.BTW, Kent Overstreet is the author of BCacheFS, currently the most advanced filesystem for GNU/Linux.
Why is this bot spamming a literal who every day
You can't say "oops!" without OOP
Previous Thread: >>106831535Shield-Maiden Edition>Links:>DALL-E 3https://www.bing.com/images/createhttps://designer.microsoft.com/image-creator>4ohttps://chatgpt.com/https://sora.chatgpt.comhttps://copilot.microsoft.com/>Imagen 3https://labs.google/fx/tools/image-fx>Imagen 4 and Nano Bananahttps://gemini.google.com/appComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
GPT-5 feels even more censored and useless now. I'm actually preferring the Thinking model for prompt building, even though with 4o I usually preferred the non-thinking one.
The average male fantasy
Been a long time since I generated anything, video generation is advancing rapidly, how does image generation compare?
>>106871624Good one
Do you prefer fixi.js or HTMX?https://github.com/bigskysoftware/fixi>Free beginner resources to get started with HTML, CSS and JShttps://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Learn - MDN is your best friend for fundamentalshttps://web.dev/learn/ - Guides by Google, you can also learn concepts like Accessibility, Responsive Design etchttps://eloquentjavascript.net/Eloquent_JavaScript.pdf - A modern introduction to JavaScripthttps://javascript.info/ - Quite a good JS tutorialhttps://flukeout.github.io/ - Learn CSS selectors in no timehttps://flexboxfroggy.com/ and https://cssgridgarden.com/ - Learn flex and grid in CSS>Resources for backend languageshttps://nodejs.org/en/learn/getting-started/introduction-to-nodejs - An intro to Node.jshttps://www.phptutorial.net - A PHP tutorialhttps://dev.java/learn/ - A Java tutorialComment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>106873153y tho?
>>106873153Switch over to Go.
>>106873153import is modern jsrequire is a historical artifact
Zig and rust wonSorry c and cpp trannies
>2025>there are still single threaded SQL Management toolsWhy are there so many tools that haven't fixed this? A hung query or unresponsive server shouldn't kill the program.
I can't take it anymore guys, tell me it's gonna be alright
>>106872934Honestly Im not sure. Just checked the flatpak vesion and it works fine aswell, so I cant imagine it will take long for every new build to be working properly
Appimage user, works perfectly on my machine.
>>106871273code needs some worki can post cute screenshots of my code if you want>>106872934it has too many dependencies that cause problems between different platforms and it's clear that they only test on some of themsome anons say that it's broken on windowsnot a problem for my youtube client since it's dependency free
>>106856125It has always been alright.It will always be alright.#CenobiteThings
>>106856125You jinxed it, it's fixed now
>corrupts the instant you use it
>>106871527Just use the DKMS module bruv, it will go into the kernel again eventually anyway
>>106871353no, but some posts are def kent
>>106869043I got bitten by it years ago, and more recently was able to pretty trivially break stuff in testing with a raid5 setup. Went with zfs instead and have no real complaints. Sure, rolling your own kernels with dkms is a headache, but it's automatable. I also got bitten by the default quota settings being fucking retarded. I had a system that got too full and had to attach a USB drive to the pool to have enough free space to delete stuff. That's also something that can be worked around, but there's a lot of really retarded foot-guns like that in btrfs.btrfs is fine, arguably ideal even, for single disk systems these days. It depends on whether you want to have baked in encryption or not. ZFS lets you have different encryptions schemes per dataset, and the encryption is done in a way that allows you to validate data without decrypting it, so you can have thin provisioned backups on an offsite machine without ever having to trust it to decrypt stuff. btrfs doesn't support that at all, so you're stuck with the limitations of LUKS. Maybe not a huge deal, but my encrypted backups are nearly 4TB, and there's a lot of changes from month to month. With ZFS I raw send the encrypted blocks and it Just Werks™. With btrfs I'd have to decrypt stuff, send whole disk images, or use some third party tool to manage that stuff, and all of that means you're adding extra steps. With ZFS you can manage all the snapshots, keep them thin provisioned, encrypted, and validated, and if you ever need to do a restore you just send it back. Trying to piece together multiple encrypted partial sends, or wasting space/backups on full backups is a nightmare.
>>106873726>cont.>>106872049>btrfs has the most flexible raid out of anything out there, there's no planning or commitment required, it will adapt to whatever you need the moment you need itI'd argue that ceph is the most flexible because it handles rebalancing and multiple systems automatically. btrfs can rebalance, but it doesn't do so automatically. The way it distributes stuff is often really stupid as well, which means your rebuild times can get unhinged on modern 20TB+ capacity drives. If you have true mirrors, you can rebuild a failed disk by doing a linear copy from one end of the disk to the other, and it's pretty trivial to skip over unused space to accelerate this. btrfs will just throw shit on random drives by default, so rebuilding a failed drive requires random I/O traversal, and that can lead to atrocious rebuild performance.Also, the way the block pointer structure is setup in btrfs means that there's no real inline deduplication, so if you're cloning data with reference copy, or using a tool to do deduplication, that gets broken any time you perform a rebalance/defrag. If you heavily use deduplication (which to be fair 99% of people don't), or if you're someone who does a lot of reflink copying for stuff like destructive edits or cloning repos, a rebalance can massively balloon your disk usage, and there's no "hey, this might be a problem, are you sure you want to do this?" type warning. IIRC there's not even a dryrun option to test for this. Deduping has to be handled by outside tools, and I'd argue that it's completely unhinged for it to not keep deduped data deduped when doing maintenance tasks.>you can also easily convert it to a raid1 later on by just adding another driveThat's going to be true for almost any file system. A basic mirror is about as simple as it gets raidwise. You can convert an ext4, xfs, or whatever partition into a mirror with mdadm. You can attach a drive to a vdev in zfs and turn it into a mirror
>>106873801>that gets broken any time you perform a rebalance/defragdata is unshared when doing a defrag, but not a balance, so a lot of this paragraph is simply incorrecti've heard of ceph, but quite unfamiliar with it. i know enough about it to know it's a distributed file system. i don't know how feasible/sensible it is to use in a single/few-user or home setting. i'd be really curious to know more about it if someone here has used it>That's going to be true for almost any file system. A basic mirror is about as simple as it gets raidwise. You can convert an ext4, xfs, or whatever partition into a mirror with mdadm. You can attach a drive to a vdev in zfs and turn it into a mirroryea, it's not hard to make a mirror in general, but like in btrfs you can turn a single device volume into a raid1 with two commands, even while you're booted from it, then you could add a third and fourth and turn it into a raid10. i've done similar with mdadm, but it's not as nice to do. plus you can make a raid out of drives of different sizes with btrfs, or a raid1 out of more than two drives while only keeping two copies of data
Previous >>106732562READ THE WIKI! & help by contributing:https://wiki.installgentoo.com/wiki/Home_server>NAS Case Guide. Feel free to add to it:https://wiki.installgentoo.com/wiki/Home_server/Case_guide/hsg/ is about learning and expanding your horizons. Know all about NAS? Learn virtualisation. Spun up some VMs? Learn about networking by standing up a OPNsense/PFsense box and configuring some VLANs. There's always more to learn and chances to grow. Think you’re god-tier already? Setup OpenStack and report back.>What software should I run?Install Gentoo. Or whatever flavour of *nix is best for the job or most comfy for you. Jellyfin/Emby/Plex to replace Netflix, Nextcloud to replace Googlel, Ampache/Navidrome to replace Spotify, the list goes on. Look at the awesome self-hosted list and ask.>Why should I have a home server?/hsg/ is about learning and expanding your horizons. De-botnet your life. Learn something new. Serving applications to yourself, your family, and your frens feels good. Put your tech skills to good use for yourself and those close to you. Store their data with proper availability redundancy and backups and serve it back to them with a /comfy/ easy to use interface.Comment too long. Click here to view the full text.
>>106872896For personal things I always use a list of whatever I am hype about in the moment (mostly astronomical bodies).My autism tingles the right way as I connect the server usage to whatever I choose for the name.
>>106872896my server VM autism is pretty bad: Norse Gods.
>>106872896Mine are called Mini-01all the way up to Mini-06
>>106872896maseratisamantha38gsofiarosenatashanicealexxxisalluremollyevansaprilflores
>>106872263people truly will buy the nicest servers and then buy the most chinese switch made of adobe and pig iron in existencehave some self respect
>"Anon, what do you do for a living? It is not some boring nerd shit, is it?"Your response, /g/?
>>106873823360 walk away
>>106873831that is a full circle retard
>>106873823ceo of a low growth loss making enterprise.
>>106873823I'm a fitness advisor.
>>106873823im a Private and Classified Informations Transparency Architect...
>Makes C obsoleteIs Hare the most based language?
>>106873782Hare is the most brained language
>>106873782Oh, hell yeah, Hare is friggin' amazing, Anon! Here's the tea:1. **Speed**: Hare's compiler is fucking fast. We're talking milliseconds here, not seconds. It's like watching a race car versus a fucking turtle.2. **Simplicity**: The syntax is clean and straightforward. It's like the language was designed by someone who actually understands humans, not just computers.3. **Safety**: It's got this cool feature called "safe" pointers. No more null pointer panic attacks, you know?4. **Performance**: Hare can hold its own against C and Rust in terms of performance. It's like the dark horse of programming languages.5. **Cross-Platform**: Write once, run anywhere. From Windows to Linux to your grandma's toaster, Hare's got you covered.6. **Garbage Collection**: Optional, but when you need it, it's there. No more memory leaks sucking the life out of your program.Comment too long. Click here to view the full text.