The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread
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@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
Right as I am busting my ass to go to the cloud, there is this…
Don’t know what the company does but an interesting read.
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@tigger said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
Right as I am busting my ass to go to the cloud, there is this…
Don’t know what the company does but an interesting read.
The software I used to support on the mainframe had a hosted option since the early 90s. We never went there, cause part of the deal was that you had to run their canned stuff. You could do online workflow/screen customization without hardcore devs, but any customized adhoc reports cost you setup fees and runtime cost center costs.
We got the locally managed version and did all sorts of things, some of which boggled the software company. We were known for innovative mangling of their stuff, including blowing through reporting limits.
My installation library naming scheme was explained to them cause it allowed us to safely deploy many update levels at once. It became the standard for deployment, and exists today in their windows version geared for smaller hospitals.
So ya pretty much already learned to blow off hosting when you have the need for control and it didn’t cost near as much as buying consulting services.
It did cost either way, but we had virtually the fastest accounts receivable in healthcare.
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Download more disk space.
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@Tazz can’t remember if I read it here or elsewhere but a week ago there was a story about new legislation in Japan that stopped requiring companies to submit data to government agencies on floppy disk. I didn’t even know you could still buy floppy disks.
I used to have this image of Japan being super technologically advanced but in recent years I’ve been learning that, in a lot of respects, they haven’t really progressed much since the 90’s.
Edit:
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@Hog I want to know more, but the video just cut off. WTF is that shit?
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@Gators1 yeah me too. That it flies at all is impressive but it seemed super maneuverable too.
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I don’t condone it of course but I still kind of admire this:
According to a grand jury indictment unsealed in December 2022, cab drivers Daniel Abayev and Peter Leyman conspired with Russian cybercriminals to hack into the electronic taxi dispatch system at the John F. Kennedy International Airport so they could charge cabbies $10 to skip the line of taxis waiting to pick up passengers.
“I know that the Pentagon is being hacked,” Abayev texted one of the Russian hackers, according to the indictment. “So, can’t we hack the taxi industry?”Edit: this part is a bit fucking draconian. Remember, they got 4 year prison sentences:
In a sentencing memo, Myers argued that the amount of restitution ordered as punishment — including $7 million to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which runs JFK airport, to entirely replace its outdated dispatching system — wasn’t consistent with the roughly $80,000 Abayev and Leyman each made from the scheme.
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Fuck em.
BTW, TNN told me NY only locks up patriots that accidentally misgendered someone? WTF?
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@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
Fuck em.
Really? His kids have to live in poverty because his victims had to watch people cut in line?
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The DOJ apparently hacked over a 1000 retail routers to remove Russian malware and disable remote admin to prevent reinfection. I’m sure none of the affected people would mind even if they knew but it’s interesting nonetheless.
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@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
Fuck em.
Really? His kids have to live in poverty because his victims had to watch people cut in line?
Deterrence.
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@Kilemall You can cut people’s hands off for shop lifting too and that might dissuade a few more offenders but I wouldn’t admire that either.
Anyway, we’re arguing values which is profitless.
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@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Kilemall You can cut people’s hands off for shop lifting too and that might dissuade a few more offenders but I wouldn’t admire that either.
Anyway, we’re arguing values which is profitless.
The problem is not that these guys got a harsh sentence for screwing up civilization, it’s that people in power don’t get held to the same standard for the same or greater levels of damage.
The auditing firms that rubber stamped loan bonds on junk mortgage feeding the 2008 crisis come to mind.
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Been hearing about these for years, but so far nothing. Will be cool if they finally can produce the reactors as they have a lot of potential.
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@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
Been hearing about these for years, but so far nothing. Will be cool if they finally can produce the reactors as they have a lot of potential.
Germany has a new design as well. Nuclear bad though so sayeth the ‘green revolutionaries’.
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@madrebel nice. There are a ton of benefits if they can get it working. I think they were having issues with the materials science several years ago as the salt bath is corrosive or something like that. It’s nice we can get rid of all the nuclear waste in the process and the residual waste from these plants basically is safe in a few hundred years instead of tens of thousands. I was surprised to learn that the existing fuel rods in traditional plants only spend < 10% of the fuel before they are removed and become waste.
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The approach is based on the same light-based optical data storage (ODS) approach used to write DVDs, but the twist is that it works in three dimensions. That means hundreds of layers instead of one, resulting in a massive jump in capacity.
According to the research team, we’re talking petabits on a single disc: that’s a thousand trillion bits, the equivalent of fitting around a million standard definition movies on something the size of a DVD. Stack them together, and we’re getting into the realm of exabits (a million trillion or a quintillion bits).
Japan government accepts it’s no longer the ’90s, stops requiring floppy disks
