sylver_dragon

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] sylver_dragon@lemmy.world 14 points 1 day ago

But have you considered, line goes up?

Sadly, there are probably a lot of developers who are burning the candle at both ends to push this out the door, on an unrealistic schedule. And who will then burn the candle in the middle as well when the release is a buggy mess. Only to finally be tossed aside like so much trash when the game fails to realize these unrealistic expectations. And all of that will squarely be the fault of management, who will wipe away crocodile tears with the profits this game will generate. Just not the profit they unrealistically promised investors; so you know, the game was actually a failure. Fuck EA's management, the world would probably be a better place if the C-Level suite and board room got emptied out by some disaster.

[–] sylver_dragon@lemmy.world 3 points 5 days ago

Valheim.

Mistlands - Not because "whaaa, Mistalnds hard", but because the whole area is built around verticality and the game engine most certainly is not. Combat is Valheim is generally pretty good, but after a reasonable amount of playtime, you will experience the frustration of swinging under/over enemies, because of minor variations in terrain height. Mistlands dials this problem up to 11, with the added bonus of enemies which specifically take advantage of this problem.

The Mistlands also turns exploration into a boring, grindy chore. The shorelines are a nightmare to sail around and even with the wisp, the mist is always too close to deal with said shorelines. So, you're hoofing it through terrain which is designed to be difficult to navigate and move across. The feather cape helps, a bit. But, you're still going to spend way too long faffing about, jumping up one side of a ridge and floating down the other, only to find that you're in a gully with nothing useful and need to jump up the other side. Seeing dungeon entrances at any range is impossible. Enemies regularly pop out of nowhere and you're forced into dealing with the combat verticality problems.

I'll also throw a bit of shade at "Refined Eitr" as a resource, though I think the problem is less the resource and more the grind to get the parts for it. To start with, you need to make a Black Forge, to make that you need Black Cores, to get Black Cores, you need to spend hours in the mists hoping to stumble across one or more dungeons to get the cores. And inside the dungeons, expect lots of combat where the verticality problem is on prominent display. Now that you have the Black Table, you get to make the Eitr Refinery, which requires more Black Cores. Hope you enjoyed getting them the first time! Ok great, more cores obtained, time to go stumbling about again looking for Soft Tissue. With any luck, you've been mining (or at least marking) nodes along the way. Though, expect to spend more time lost in the Mists, you need a shit ton of Soft Tissue. Thankfully, this is a resource you can take through a portal, so that's nice.

And finally, you get to raid Dverger towns for a required material to extract sap, a Sap Extractor. "What about trade? Vikings were well know traders", you ask. Nope, fuck trade, all that gold you've been collecting, go spend it on some clothes which you will never actually use. You want a Sap Extractor, put on your killing pants and get raiding. Ok fine, we have our Sap Extractor covered in Dverger gore. And that gets us to the least horrible part of our Refined Eitr. Sap extraction is not terrible, find a spot with several roots in close proximity and just rotate a few extractors through them.

Right let's get our Eitr Refinery built...and why the fuck is one of the input ports on the top? Ok whatever, I'll build some stairs and...why the fuck is this thing tossing off damaging sparks? Yes, I know you can wrap it in iron bars, but seriously what the fuck? Why is this even a game mechanic? It's really the perfect metaphor for all of the Mistlands. It's needlessly annoying and doesn't really provide anything positive for gameplay or fun. Just another pointless grind tossed in because, "players like hard things, right?"

[–] sylver_dragon@lemmy.world 6 points 5 days ago

Mmm, feel that nice astroturf.

[–] sylver_dragon@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago

The initial access seems to include an Apache CVE from 2019 and a WordPress plugin CVE from 2017. Honestly, UCSD should write a "thank you" letter to Androxgh0st for highlighting their poor patch management, and only using it for C2 in the process. Rather than as a beachhead into the network for a full-blown ransomware attack.

If your patch management is this bad, you shouldn't be allowed to put stuff on the internet.

[–] sylver_dragon@lemmy.world 5 points 1 week ago

For anyone else who asked:
WTF is deepin?

It's less fun than the first guess I came up with based on the name "deep in", and it's really just a Chinese Linux Distro with a bunch of re-packaged and/or proprietary applications. Which, one would expect, to be completely balls "deep in" your private information.

[–] sylver_dragon@lemmy.world 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

First question which popped into my mind was, "Will they force Defender out as well?"
Or, is Microsoft about to abuse it's position to stifle competition? Again.

[–] sylver_dragon@lemmy.world 13 points 1 week ago (1 children)

do anticheat count as antivirus?

No. But, from the article:

Microsoft has been speaking with game developers about how to reduce the amount of kernel usage

The CrowdStrike fiasco was finally enough for Microsoft to look at forcing drivers out of the kernel. This is absolutely a good thing and will hopefully lead to a more stable Windows.

[–] sylver_dragon@lemmy.world 16 points 1 week ago

Why We're Opening Betting Sponsorships

Because holy fuck that's a lot of money.

How We're Doing It Responsibly

We''re not. We're just trying to cash in and pretend we're not going to take advantage of people with poor impulse control.

[–] sylver_dragon@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I have it on good authority that you currently have a project idea which you can use to pick one (or more) of those paths and start learning. ;-)

For example user management in studio3T

Not sure how I missed this on my first read of your post. But, this looks like a fancy front end to making MongoDB calls. That makes life easier, MongoDB has a well documented API and a driver for C#. As an aside, if you want to get really good at PowerShell, getting a basic working knowledge of C# and .Net in general is really helpful. For the lazy (and I always like lazy), there's even a pre-built MongoDB module on the PowerShell Galley called Mdbc. There is also the Project's GitHub Page which has a lot of useful info.

Granted, this path likely means learning enough about MongoDB to create/delete/modify users. But you came here expecting a load of homework, right? Also, this is a good excuse to spin up a docker container running MongoDB and go hog wild breaking the fuck out of it (just call it "research" if management asks). And who doesn't love breaking stuff?

I'd also note that you may be able to get some help along the way by capturing the network traffic to the server caused by the Studio3T GUI. WireShark can capture the traffic to/from the DB server and you can read that to reverse engineer some of the calls you care about. Just, make sure you talk to your security folks before you download/install WireShark. If they are worth their salt, they'll understand an engineer installing/running wireshark, it just makes their day easier if they know the alert is coming first. Assuming the GUI isn't complete shit, it may encrypt traffic. This can be dealt with by using the SSLKEYLOGFILE environmental variable. In most cases, this results in the TLS keys being saved to a file and that can be imported into WireShark.

Good luck, and have fun!

[–] sylver_dragon@lemmy.world 9 points 1 week ago

How you gonna teach English without being able to teach ~~nouns~~ words which describe people, places or things?

FTFY, you dirty n-word user you.

[–] sylver_dragon@lemmy.world 21 points 1 week ago

The other way to read this data is that 75% (a sizable majority) of people feel they can be comfortable on less than $150k. I also suspect this strongly correlates to location. Someone living in Washington, DC is going to need a lot more to feel comfortable than someone living in Bumblefuck, MO.

[–] sylver_dragon@lemmy.world 7 points 1 week ago (1 children)

There's plenty of fraud, waste and abuse. It's just conveniently called "contracting", so money can be shoved out the door to private companies which do half the work at twice the price and end up delivering shoddy results. The reason DOGE didn't find anything was that they weren't looking at the contracting companies and instead were looking at the agencies themselves and the employees working for them. I won't say that some of those agencies aren't a complete waste of money (see: TSA, ICE, DOGE); but, DOGE was hyper-focused on agencies which actually do useful stuff (e.g.: SSA, NOAA).

 

The report by Wood MacKenzie, an energy research firm, examined 20 large power users. In almost all of those cases, the firm found, the money that large energy users paid to electric utilities would not be enough to cover the cost of the equipment needed to serve them. The rest of the costs would be borne by other utility customers or the utility itself.

 

The D.C. public transportation system is set to expand dramatically over the next 20 years. But aside from the long-delayed Purple Line, new train tracks aren’t part of the plan. Leaders in and around the Metro system are putting their energy behind the less-loved side of transit: the bus.

In June, Metro rolls out its new “Better Bus Network,” remaking the existing system with fewer stops and promises of faster service. Northern Virginia leaders just proposed 28 new bus routes, five of which are already in the works.

 

The D.C. public transportation system is set to expand dramatically over the next 20 years. But aside from the long-delayed Purple Line, new train tracks aren’t part of the plan. Leaders in and around the Metro system are putting their energy behind the less-loved side of transit: the bus.

In June, Metro rolls out its new “Better Bus Network,” remaking the existing system with fewer stops and promises of faster service. Northern Virginia leaders just proposed 28 new bus routes, five of which are already in the works.

 

Hundreds of employees at the Georgia-Pacific plywood plant in Emporia, Virginia, are losing their jobs after the facility ceased operations immediately on Friday.

The company delivered the news to the plant's just over 550 employees during a series of meetings Friday morning and through a letter distributed to workers, according to Rick Kimble, Georgia-Pacific's director of public affairs.

 

From last year to now, Virginia raised teacher pay by an average of $3,000. Still, the commonwealth’s average pay rate for educators remains stagnant compared to other states, according to the latest salary report published by the National Education Association.

The commonwealth dropped by one spot to 26th, paying teachers an average of $66,327, an increase from a year ago. Virginia’s average teacher pay is $5,703 below the national average of $72,030, the NEA report states.

 

Virginia’s 2025 governor’s race is set: Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears will face former Rep. Abigail Spanberger, the Democratic nominee.

The Republican Party of Virginia announced Saturday afternoon that Earle-Sears is the GOP nominee and that there will be no Republican primary for governor.

The Democratic Party of Virginia announced Friday Spanberger is the Democratic nominee for governor, as no other Democrats filed to run before the deadline.

 

With layoffs starting at WordPress, and me recognizing that I'm a bit of a dinosaur in this regard, I'm wondering what folks are using for self-hosting their own blog these days? While I'm not exactly prolific, I do like having my own little home on the internet to write up things I find interesting and pretending people actually read it. And, of course, I really don't want to be reliant on someone else's computers; so, the ability to self-host is a must.

Honestly, my requirements are pretty basic. I just want something to write and host articles and not have to fight with some janky text editor. And pre-built themes would be very nice. It would be nice if there was an easy way to transition stuff I have in WP; but, I can probably get that with some creative copy/paste work.

So, what are all the cool kids blogging on these days?

 

Former Culpeper County Sheriff Scott Jenkins was sentenced Friday to 10 years in federal prison for accepting over $75,000 in bribes in exchange for appointing numerous Northern Virginia businessmen as auxiliary deputy sheriffs within his department.

 

With other Virginia communities drying up, this one seemed like a good choice to have some sort of representation for the residents of Virginia on Lemmy.
Unfortunately, the user who created this sub had been inactive for two years and no upkeep was being done.

For that reason, I reached out to the admins and requested to take over moderation so that I could do some basic work to keep the lights on.

To that end, I'd appreciate any ideas of what the community needs (I already unpinned the two year old pinned posts).

So, what does everyone want with c/virginia?

 

When companies win their pitches for state incentives to fund a new plant or expansion in Virginia, they sometimes end up hiring fewer people than they said they would.

But a shift away from making upfront grants — to require that companies show that they have hired and invested before the state releases funds — has made a big difference, according to a Richmond Times-Dispatch analysis of state economic development spending data.

 

When companies win their pitches for state incentives to fund a new plant or expansion in Virginia, they sometimes end up hiring fewer people than they said they would.

But a shift away from making upfront grants — to require that companies show that they have hired and invested before the state releases funds — has made a big difference, according to a Richmond Times-Dispatch analysis of state economic development spending data.

 

I would like to request to take over moderation of the community: https://lemmy.world/c/virginia

The current mod "@gabowo@lemmy.world gabowo" has been inactive for 2 years and the last mod action for the community was also 2 years ago (https://lemmy.world/modlog/4102).

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