Comments

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

Shdwdrgn, to datahoarder in Publicly hosting data?

Good luck! And don’t get stuck on the software I use, you may find something else that is better suited for your type of data. Like if your content is wrapped up in PDFs or some kind of zipped files then the best solution is one that can peer into those files to give search hits on the given text. Of course if your content is already fairly plan text then pretty much any solution would work.

Shdwdrgn, to datahoarder in Publicly hosting data?

One easy solution might be to check into a self-hosted search engine? I’ve used mnogosearch in the past which worked well for spidering a single domain, but it only created the database and didn’t have a web page front end. Still, if you let it go crazy across your nextcloud pages and add a search bar to your website it could provide what you’re missing. They provided enough examples at the time for me to write my own search page pretty easily.

Shdwdrgn, to datahoarder in How to become a pirate archivist?

Crap, I knew I forgot something important.

Shdwdrgn, to datahoarder in How to become a pirate archivist?
  • Buy larger storage drives
  • Download content
  • Repeat
Shdwdrgn, to asklemmy in What should individual communities on Lemmy be called?

I mean, a community is made up of its members, so it still seems to fit?

Shdwdrgn, to linux in 4 reasons to try Mozilla’s new Firefox Linux package for Ubuntu and Debian derivatives | The Mozilla Blog

I found it annoying when FF no longer showed the http part of an address, but since nearly everything is on https these days it very rarely bounces back and forth for me any more.

Shdwdrgn, to linux in 4 reasons to try Mozilla’s new Firefox Linux package for Ubuntu and Debian derivatives | The Mozilla Blog

So it’s ok that it works for your use-case and screw consistency? My point is that if you say it’s ok for one application to do things their own way, it basically invites every other app developer to ignore the standards and just do whatever they want. And no, single-click selecting the entire URL shouldn’t be considered a standard, it’s just something that changed in the last few years when one browser made the call and everyone else played follow-the-leader.

By the way, you mentioned that “all” of your browsers behave the same way . I’d like to remind you that Chrome, Chromium, and Safari all use the same engine so they’re basically the same thing. I think Opera stands alone but I don’t have that installed here so I can’t check it immediately. I’d ask if anyone had checked Exploder, but who in their right mind uses that except for work-related stuff where their developers can’t write HTML, and Microsoft is probably the ones who started this mess anything since they’re well know for ignoring standards. That really only leaves four unique browsers though. Not saying you didn’t consider this already, I just wanted to point it out in case you hadn’t.

If you want an example similar to an address bar, how about the current path in any file manager – I have Caja, Dolphin, and something called PCManFM here (not sure where that came from)? Once again, a single click does not select the entire path, it just places the cursor exactly where you clicked and nothing is selected. I can’t think of any other types of applications where you have some kind of a navigation bar, but that’s the closest example I know.

Shdwdrgn, to linux in Ending support for Windows 10 could send 240 million computers to the landfill. Why not install Linux on them?

Was it EVER faster though? My experience with Windows has always been that they release new versions based on upcoming hardware specs and unless you spend top-dollar on the very latest hardware for their next release, you are going to see things moving slower on the new desktop. That’s one of things I’ve enjoyed about linux, you can pretty much always upgrade the OS on an older machine without concern of taking a hit on the performance, and sometimes you even get a boost.

Shdwdrgn, to linux in ShellBot Uses Hex IPs to Evade Detection in Attacks on Linux SSH Servers

Does anyone know of a linux tool that can immediately ban an IP address if they try to log in to ssh with specific user names? I see a ton of attempts in my logs for names like fax, mysql, admin, and of course root. Fail2ban only works if the same IP makes repeated attempts but I’m betting if I could generate a list from these failed attempts it would probably correlate with standard blocklists of compromised hosts. For that matter, is there a way to use an RBL to limit addresses that ssh will even accept? Of course none of these attempts have a chance of logging in, but it would still be nice to further limit my exposure for any future attacks.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • localhost
  • All magazines
  • Loading…
    Loading the web debug toolbar…
    Attempt #