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Firejail requires SUID, LandLock does not.

Also, it's very easy to write your own LandLock policy in the programming language of your choice and wrap whatever program you like rather than downloading stuff from Github. Here's another example in Go:

    package main

    import (
     "fmt"
     "github.com/landlock-lsm/go-landlock/landlock"
     "log"
     "os"
     "os/exec"
    )

    func main() {
        // Define the LandLock policy
        err := landlock.V1.RestrictPaths(...)

        // Execute FireFox
        cmd := exec.Command("/usr/bin/firefox")
    }

> Unless you have an Intel Arc iGPU, Intel Arc B50/B60, or fancy server GPU, you won't have SR-IOV on your system, and that means you have to pass the entire GPU into the VM.

This is changing, specifically on QEMU with virtio-gpu, virgl, and Venus.

Virgl exposes a virtualized GPU in the guest that serializes OpenGL commands and sends them to the host for rendering. Venus is similar, but exposes Vulkan in the guest. Both of these work without dedicating the host GPU to the guest, it gives mediated access to the GPU without any specific hardware.

There's also another path known as vDRM/host native context that proxies the direct rendering manager (DRM) uAPI from the guest to the host over virtio-gpu, which allows the guest to use the native mesa driver for lower overhead compared to virgl/Venus. This does, however, require a small amount of code to support per driver in virglrenderer. There are patches that have been on the QEMU mailing list to add this since earlier this year, while crosvm already supports it.


That’s interesting, I was specifically looking for AMD hardware being offered by neoclouds, they seem to be rare.

I like your bet though. The difference between NVDA and AMD has never really existed on a hardware level for decades. AMD has always been on par, and software is software, it will catch up.

AMD will be a stock many people will miss because the opportunity has presented itself at the height of AI bubble talk, and this will leave many in the dust. Doubling and tripling of their market cap is pretty much a forgone conclusion.


It was a sloppy statement, but is broadly speaking, true. For overwhelming citations, https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu... (HN Search of posts from Matt Stoller's BIG Newsletter, which focuses on corporate monopolies and power in the US).

https://www.thebignewsletter.com/about

> The Problem: America is in a monopoly crisis. A monopoly is, at its core, a private government that sets the terms, services, and wages in a market, like how Mark Zuckerberg structures discourse in social networking. Every monopoly is a mini-dictatorship over a market. And today, there are monopolies everywhere. They are in big markets, like search engines, medicine, cable, and shipping. They are also in small ones, like mail sorting software and cheerleading. Over 75% of American industries are more consolidated today than they were decades ago.

> Unregulated monopolies cause a lot of problems. They raise prices, lower wages, and move money from rural areas to a few gilded cities. Dominant firms don’t focus on competing, they focus on corrupting our politics to protect their market power. Monopolies are also brittle, and tend to put all their eggs in one basket, which results in shortages. There is a reason everyone hates monopolies, and why we’ve hated them for hundreds of years.

https://blogs.cornell.edu/info2040/2021/09/17/graph-theory-o... (Food consolidation)

https://followthemoney.com/infographic-the-u-s-media-is-cont... (Media consolidation)

https://www.kearney.com/industry/energy/article/how-utilitie... (US electric utilities)

https://aglawjournal.wp.drake.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/6... [pdf] (Agriculture consolidation)

https://www.visualcapitalist.com/interactive-major-tech-acqu... (Big Tech consolidation)


An ideal listen for anyone looking to sharpen their critical thinking. The reasoning moves are subtle, and it’s easy to miss the small leaps and omissions that reveal how persuasive but unsound arguments work.

If you want to test your logic radar, keep a Reasoning-Error Bingo Card handy — here are some of the most common moves to watch for:

- Anecdotal Evidence as Proof – moving personal testimonies presented as sufficient evidence.

- Cherry-picking – highlighting the few “hits” or successful moments and ignoring null or failed sessions.

- Facilitator/Ideomotor Bias – unacknowledged influence of helpers who already know the answers.

- Lack of Experimental Control – demonstrations without blinding or verification procedures.

- Equivocation on “Spelling” and “Communication” – shifting definitions of what counts as independent expression.

- Over-extension/Universal Claim – extrapolating from a handful of cases to “all nonspeakers.”

- Appeal to Emotion and Narrative Framing – using distressing or inspiring stories to disarm skepticism.

- Appeal to Authority – invoking credentials, research funding, or famous supporters in place of data.

- Confirmation Bias/Omission of Counter-Evidence – excluding decades of research debunking similar methods.

- Shifting the Burden of Proof – implying critics must disprove telepathy rather than producers proving it.

- Quantum-Language Hijack – invoking “quantum entanglement” or “energy fields” as pseudo-explanations.

- False Dichotomy (“open-minded vs. materialist”) – framing skepticism as moral or emotional failure.

- Paradigm-Appeal Fallacy – claiming we’re witnessing a scientific “revolution” instead of providing data.

- Ambiguous Success Criteria – redefining what counts as a correct answer or “connection.”

- Halo Effect through Compassion – moral halo from helping disabled children transferred to truth of the claim.

Ironically, in trying to transcend “materialism,” the series repeats Descartes’ old mistake — treating mind and matter as mutually exclusive instead of as aspects of a single natural order. That move saddles them with the same impossible burden Descartes faced: explaining how an immaterial mind could causally interact with the physical world on top of everything else they need to prove.


I have found adding the following four lines to the immich proxy host in nginx proxy manager (advanced tab) solved my immich syncing issues:

client_max_body_size 50000M;

proxy_read_timeout 600s;

proxy_send_timeout 600s;

send_timeout 600s;

FWIW, my library is about 22000 items large. Hope this helps someone.


I'm working on packaging Fil-C for Nix, as well as integrating Fil-C as a toolchain in Nix so you can build any Nix package with Fil-C.

https://github.com/mbrock/filnix

It's working. It builds tmux, nethack, coreutils, Perl, Tcl, Lua, SQLite, and a bunch of other stuff.

Binary cache on https://filc.cachix.org so you don't have to wait 40 minutes for the Clang fork to build.

If you have Nix with flakes on a 64-bit Linux computer, you can run

    nix run github:mbrock/filnix#nethack
right now!

> We can even just look at the title here: Do the simplest thing POSSIBLE.

I think you're focusing on weasel words to avoid addressing the actual problem raided by OP, which is the elephant in the room.

Your limited understanding of the problem domain doesn't mean the problem has a simple or even simpler solution. It just means you failed to understand the needs and tradeoffs that led to complexity. Unwittingly, this misunderstanding originates even more complexity.

Listen, there are many types of complexity. Among which there is complexity intrinsic to the problem domain, but there is also accidental complexity that's needlessly created by tradeoffs and failures in analysis and even execution.

If you replace an existing solution with a solution which you believe is simpler, odds are you will have to scramble to address the impacts of all tradeoffs and oversights in your analysis. Addressing those represents complexity as well, complexity created by your solution.

Imagine a web service that has autoscaling rules based on request rates and computational limits. You might look at request patterns and say that this is far too complex, you can just manually scale the system with enough room to handle your average load, and when required you can just click a button and rescale it to meet demand. Awesome work, you simplified your system. Except your system, like all web services, experiences seasonal request patterns. Now you have schedules and meetings and even incidents that wake up your team in the middle of the night. Your pager fires because a feature was released and you didn't quite scaled the service ro accommodate for the new peak load. So now your simple system requires a fair degree of hand holding to work with any semblance of reliability. Is this not a form of complexity as well? Yes, yes it is. You didn't eliminated complexity, it is only shifted to another place. You saw complexity in autoscaling rules and believed you eliminated that complexity by replacing it with manual scaling, but you only ended up shifting that complexity somewhere else. Why? Because it's intrinsic to the problem domain, and requiring more manual work to tackle that complexity introduces more accidental complexity than what is required to address the issue.


Also, does not help that the US Army does NOT want this FMECA document released. From the article that is cited the US Army's project manager & legal counsel gave this response to help Sig justify keeping the document sealed:

> The Army position would be to oppose the distribution to the public of the > FMECA document as it potentially reveals critical information about the > handgun (design, reliability, performance, etc.).


I recently used ffmpeg to undo perspective from the image you just provide 4 corners coordinates and it produced straightened image:

    ffmpeg -i input.jpg -vf "perspective=x0=784:y0=396:x1=2396:y1=397:x2=684:y2=2479:x3=2610:y3=2467" output.jpg

From my chrome/userContent.css in my Firefox profile directory:

  @namespace url(http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml);
  *, :before, :after {
  transition: none !important;
  animation-delay: 0ms !important;
  animation-duration: 0ms !important;
  }
toolkit.legacyUserProfileCustomizations.stylesheets must be set to true in about:config for this to work.

This gives me the best "reduced motion" of all (zero motion), with no effort required from developers, and unlike the official preference, does not leave me vulnerable to the no-Javascript fingerprinting discussed at https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30237846 . I haven't noticed it breaking anything important. The same can be put in chrome/userChrome.css (without the namespace header) to remove the annoying animations from Firefox itself, at the cost of occasionally breaking the tab bar (it can be fixed by dragging a tab to blank space and then immediate closing it).

I've never seen a UI animation I thought was necessary.


First, I’m sorry if there’s any typos I am doing speech to text on my iPhone writing this and it’s early in the morning.

There are many psychiatrist that have different viewpoints, for example I’ve talked to many who see purines as a problem and then you have the whole keto/mitochondrial doctors. There are many psychiatrist that will never change their minds about mood disorders because why do they have to?

I should add as well that there are so many things out of my control that are triggers that I still carry Klonopin with me just in case. It’s the one thing that can stop my psychosis in a heartbeat. I think the glutamate GABA balance is extremely important and unlooked with a lot of mental illnesses. Glutamate are a big trigger for my psychosis.

To me, and I think this can be true for anyone, it’s all about connecting the dots between the triggers and not only mood symptoms, but physical symptoms as well. But obtaining my genetics and also learning about genetics over a 10 year period helped me tremendously. I knew it was in my family because my mother, my brother and my nephew, including myself all had extremely similar experiences and also suicide attempts.

The first thing is, I could not have done this if I did not stop my medication. I’m not recommending anyone stop their medication‘s but it’s going to be really hard to find things that affect glutamate, dopamine and serotonin if you’re taking these drugs at the same time. But being on the same drugs my mother was o 50 years ago did not seem logical to me. And then I started hearing stories about people recovering from mental illness, real stories. Then my nephew hung himself at 13 and that changed everything. I knew it was genetic so I knew that’s the direction I had to go to investigate what was going on with my family.

So I got to know my mother side of the family a bit better both genetically and from stories. It definitely came from my great great grandmother side and it turns out while we all thought that side of the family was Polish, they were actually from Finland.

For myself, my gut was a big indicator and clue. I’ve had IBS-D really bad since I was a child. I managed on my own to find foods that were triggers, but it was not until I discovered I was a FUT-2 non-secretor that thing is really changed. Only 20% of Europeans carry this gene so I knew it was important

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9301175/

Eating a diet heavy in Fucose (not fructose!) fixed my gut. Seaweed, mushrooms, etc.

This was not a cause of my schizoaffective disorder, but it definitely was a trigger. When my gut was bad, I was bad. But there were a lot of times when my gut was good and I was bad as well. So I kept looking for triggers.

Then there was the early heart attacks in my family and my hyperlipidemia. In my genetics, I saw that I had genes that were more like people who were the Inuit when it comes to poly unsaturated fatty acids. At this time, I was a vegetarian. With all the research about how omega-3 helps with heart disease I decided to eat more like an Inuit and what do you know, my cholesterol totally reversed. LDL down and HDL from 30 up to 54. Plus, I was feeling much more stable. Don’t underestimate how omega-3 can control receptor function.

Both my mother and I also had what is called multiple chemical sensitivity. I don’t really like that name but that’s what I’m left with. It’s essentially a sensitivity to a lot of aldehydes. The story here is kind of long and complicated so I’m not gonna go too much into the genetic details but I’m just showing you another of several triggers that helped me find out what was going on. A lot of foods have aldehydes, aldehydes impact flavor of foods and food manufacturers add aldehydes to foods as well as add glutamate and purines to increase our taste but sensitivity to flavors.

And then we could talk about air pollution. Another big trigger. My grandparents lived in Manhattan and every time we went back there I would feel worse. I even tried to work in Manhattan for a year and that did not end well.

Alcohol is complicated. At the front end, it brings me really really big relief. But I could never drink too much because it gave me a really bad fatigue in the end. It turns out that the calcium ion channel blocking effects of alcohol are great, but the aldehydes alcohol creates just make me feel worse in the end.

So I just started avoiding those foods and eating Whole Foods that are people in a cold climate would eat, and they went away a bunch of more of my triggers.

And then there was heat. Heat is the number one trigger for me. And for some stupid reason, I moved to North Carolina. Since I ended up homeless because of this and living in a van, I was able to move to different climates to different places and also found not only the cold weather, but high altitude were triggers.

see the problem with all this is my mother married an Italian man. So instead of eating a more Polish/Finnish diet we were eating in Italian diet having a carbohydrates and red meats and little fish. This was the worst diet for me.

I do take some supplements and two supplements. I’ve been tested deficient in, and that helped me are zinc and B6. When I say these supplements help me, I mean they dramatically make me feel different when I’m am low I them and when I supplement with them. And magnesium is another one.

So now I try to live like a Sami. I ate a lot of seafood, salmon, mackerel, oysters, mussels and wild game meets. I say low latitudes in cold climates. And I also avoid polluted cities.

Now that’s gonna sound depressing because I know that not everyone can do what I did, live in an van and move somewhere that fits them genetically. But that’s the truth of the matter. In my humble opinion, they have the idea of mental illness all wrong. It is a disease more like an allergy than a mental illness. There is an environmental trigger that causes a reaction. And make no mistake I think for the majority of us, including myself, it is an immune disorder and not a nervous system disorder in a fundamental way. For example, I’ve had very low white blood cell counts, but also showed signs of lupus that they were always testing me for. They also kept testing me for HIV because of my symptoms in white blood cell counts.

And then the doozy was when I had COVID-19. Both times I caught it I had the worst psychosis in my life. For some reason, no one finds this interesting not even my doctors.

Edited to add

I want to add this in a shorter post cause I can’t believe I didn’t bring it up.

The first thing I would do was get all of her nutrition levels, tested, and ruled out as causes. There are several tests you can get without a prescription.

The first important one is a hair mineral test. But getting a full iron panel, zinc, B6, homocysteine, B12, methyl malonic acid, serum amino acid test, and of course, a complete CBC with differential and metabolic panel. Keeping track of the last two were really important for me. I noticed my white blood cell count changed when I was in different locations. For example, my white blood cell count was consistently higher in North Carolina than it was when I was in Washington state.

As an example, I had a friend who was on Prozac since she was 18 and she was now 48. I looked at her blood test and it was clear she had anemia. They did an iron panel and her serum ferritin was only three. It turned out they were treating her lifelong anemia with SNRI’s and antipsychotics.


There's the old quote from Babbage:

> On two occasions I have been asked, 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question.

This has been an obviously absurd question for two centuries now. Turns out the people asking that question were just visionaries ahead of their time.

It is kind of impressive how I'll ask for some code in the dumbest, vaguest, sometimes even wrong way, but so long as I have the proper context built up, I can get something pretty close to what I actually wanted. Though I still have problems where I can ask as precisely as possible and get things not even close to what I'm looking for.


It's not just social media. What enabled things to get to this point was Fox News, which was created specifically to do that.

" In 1970, political consultant Roger Ailes and other Nixon aides came up with a plan to create a new TV network that would circumvent existing media and provide "pro-administration" coverage to millions. "People are lazy," the aides explained in a memo. "With television you just sit — watch — listen. The thinking is done for you." Nixon embraced the idea, saying he and his supporters needed "our own news" from a network that would lead "a brutal, vicious attack on the opposition." "

https://theweek.com/articles/880107/why-fox-news-created


After he left office in 2021, it was found that Trump kept boxes and boxes of top secret files at his residence, including in the bathroom among other places. Somehow this is not an issue for the GOP.

The US is primarily attacking Houthis to support Israel and not Europe. Vance knows that.

J.D. Vance comes of as a rabid anti-Europeanist in his speeches, tweets, and apparently also his private messages. Here in Denmark the authorities reported that his wife, Usha Vance, is tied to an unusual money transfer and upcoming meeting with Greenlandic separatists.


In 2023, Hegseth had his own critique of the Biden administration handling classified documents “flippantly”, remarking on Fox News that “If at the very top there’s no accountability”, then we have “two tiers of justice”.

https://x.com/MattGertz/status/1904228588414464167

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/24/journalist-t...


There is also Ultima VII: Revisited [1] project that reached 0.1.0 last month. It attempts to fix the weird U7 perspective by giving it a 3d engine.

Between this and recent substantial progress in VCMI and HotA for HOMM3, it is an exciting time for retro PC fantasy gaming.

[1] https://www.u7revisited.com/


People should read Elon Musk by Walter Issacson. Here's an excerpt from the chapter on his "algorithm":

> [Step 2] Delete any part or process you can. You may have to add them back later. In fact, if you do not end up adding back at least 10% of them, then you didn't delete enough.

He thinks this is a feature, not a bug. Is he wrong? I don't think so.


This is every successful product, small, medium, large. I've never ever worked on a big corporate or small personal project and not experienced this.

The secret is to have a healthy system for taking in those requests, queueing them by priority, and saying, "you are 117 in the queue, you can make it faster by contributing or by explaining why its higher priority".

You can't let feature requests get to you, the moment you do your users become your opponent. None of those requests are entitled, the author has clearly already reached a point where they are antagonistic towards requests.


My own N=2 study: Based on a random comment in an obscure forum, I cured my specific form of reflux for 10 years with a couple of simple stretches.

I think they only address reflux due to https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiatal_hernia The theme is to physically push the stomach back down into place.

The first exercise was to lay in bed, one hand over the other just below the sternum, push in and slide down slowly. Repeat 4 or 5 times. I felt my esophagus being stretched during this, which was quite an odd sensation. I did this each morning and sometimes at night.

The second exercise needed the stomach to be filled with liquid. A bowl of cereal or a lot of water does the trick. Stand on your tip toes and fall down on your heels with a loud thud ten or so times. I did this once a day.

It took about two and a half months to see results. But, I went from “These PPIs are not effective enough” to “I don’t need any pills” for ten years.

Unfortunately, over the next ten years I gained a beer belly, the reflux returned, and I think the visceral fat is getting in the way of the manual manipulation exercise because I did not feel the stretch at all last time I tried the repeat the process. Maybe I should give it another go. But, mainly I need to lose the gut.


> This one you've definitely just made up.

It was called "Project Hug". Based on the different sources it contained credits for all the google offerings such as Ads, Youtube and Google Cloud in exchange for keeping apps on the Google Play platform.

Different repots on this: https://www.gamesindustry.biz/google-reportedly-paid-activis... https://gizmodo.com/google-denies-its-project-hug-bribed-20-... https://www.theverge.com/23959932/epic-v-google-trial-antitr...


They were never really properly investigated.

Eban's "Bottle of Lies" book is shocking: https://www.katherineeban.com/bottleoflies

Peter Attia on Youtube also did an investigation on this.

If you're lucky your drugs have the right amount of the active ingredient. If you're unlucky they have chalk dust in them. If you're even more unlucky, they have carcinogens in them.


IIRC the most usage is romania and bulgaria(?), not russia.

As to why not, they dont “scale out” like other generalized pharmaceuticals or medicine. Phages need a bunch of patient specific diagnostics and revision to be effective against the specific target. Thats why you see people fly to romania for a month of treatment, and not order the bacteriophages from romania.


The why is pretty well understood, no investigation needed. I don't like the design but it's because the doors are electronic and people don't know where the manual release is.

In a panic people go on muscle memory, which is push the useless button. They don't remember to pull the unmarked unobtrusive handle that they may not even know exists.

If it was up to me, sure have your electronic release, but make the manual release a big handle that looks like the ejection handle on a jet (yellow with black stripes, can't miss it).

* Or even better, have the standard door handle mechanically connected to the latch through a spring loaded solenoid that disengages the mechanism. Thus when used under normal conditions it does the thing electronically but the moment power fails the door handle connects to the manual release.


Parts of population always did and always will be falling behind other parts.

Humanity must ensure that an individual has the way to realize their potential. Freedom to raise and freedom to fall.

The internet changed everything. The information flowing freely and allowing critical thinkers to get out of a swamp they found themselves in. At least this gives everyone a chance to see.

The other thing is immigration. Your case about the US is thankfully different because one can get on a car and leave to another state or urban area. It's not as easy to get out of russia. Get a visa first. Maybe. If you have education and fit into a category. Do not fit? Too bad, there are great places like Kazakhstan that are available though.


But reality seems to be more nuanced than that:

Matter devices can be "dumb". They're intended to be able to work without Internet. Matter uses IP, and Thread provides IPV6, but that doesn't mean that either thing needs to be able to talk to the WAN.

Wifi devices can also be "dumb". For example: I have ESPHome devices that Just Work and that don't have any outside connectivity.

I don't advise anyone who asks me about smart home stuff. I'll tell them some about what I'm doing in my own home, and answer any questions they have accurately, but their eyes glaze over when they hear phrases like Zigbee or MQTT, and they've completely stopped listening by the time something like Home Assistant comes 'round.

I don't know that Matter and/or Thread will make anything better or more secure by default. The Matter 1.0 spec is only a year and a half old and it isn't clear at all how implementation is going to wind up being shaped in the real world.

But they can improve things and I hope that they will.


I think Plato's argument is best illustrated by the TV show How TV Ruined Your Life by Charlie Brooker (the creator of Black Mirror). Each episode covers different topics like technology, love, etc. which television has completely warped.

It's not even about glorifying some of the worst aspects of humanity, it's about all of our expectations. My favorite concrete example is child birth: it's always portrayed as a quick procedure in the vast majority of TV shows, less than a few minutes from water breaking to the baby popping out. Nothing could be further from the truth and a lot of women get a nasty surprise when they get pregnant and an OBGYN explains what to expect.


I've been running the unrestricted mixtral 8x7B model locally via llama.cpp. It's insanely refreshing compared to any ChatGPT models, Gemini, Llama, etc.

For one thing, and granted this is my own experience, that model is much better at coding than any of the others I've tried.

But going beyond that, if I need to do anything complicated that might hit the baked in filters on these other models I don't have to worry about it with mixtral. I'm not doing anything illegal btw. It's just that I'm an adult and don't need to use the bumper lane when I go bowling. I also approach any interaction with the thing knowing not to 100% trust it and to verify anything it says independently.


Insurers now refuse to release the name of the contracted doctor who made the denial.

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