I had to startpage (an alternative search engine) that one. I did watch a trailer that came up in the search, and I did get a chuckle.
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-_5JJmNB6E
I'm thinking of trying to track down the series now...
I think the best thing is to describe exactly what you did. Did you type the words pkg install update?
If I do that I get a message that no pkg available matching update.
Did you try to install one package, like pkg install firefox?
Did you...
Solved it. First of all, enabling natd after the OpenVPN daemon stopped the original issue which prevented connectivity with bge0:
# OpenVPN
firewall_enable="YES"
firewall_type="open"
firewall_logging="NO"
gateway_enable="YES"...
I mentioned this in the CA thread, but there's an article about some System76 people having discussions with lawmakers. https://www.theregister.com/2026/03/10/foss_age_verification_2/
For what it's worth, I saw an article (The register? I can't find it now though) how in Colorado, EFF or someone had opened a discussion with a lawmaker who hadn't considered such a thing.
AHA! Found it...
If it angers you, then it might mean it's about you. Reminds me of an old Margaret Cho routine, Then there's the tramp (she uses a meaner word). She goes on about how in every dramatic portrayal of women, one is usually playing such a role. Then...
The updates and patches are downloaded and stored in /var/db/freebsd-update/. The install phase loads them from there.
Saying 'no' to the proposed changes stops the entire upgrade process. Your freebsd-update .... upgrade never "finished", so...
Did you recently upgrade?
Are you increasing privilege with su or similar from a normal user or are you logged in as root?
What's the output of these commands:
freebsd-version -kru
mount
ls -ld /var/db/pkg
Plus, I don't think there is reason to be suspicious, it's following the exact same hype cycle all trendy techs have done before. It always peaks with people being frankly fanatical about their tech, until comes the time where it's not new...
You generally won't see Rust on many job apps during our lifetime. But there is still a push by small but vocal companies to "sell" you new products (IDEs, books, courses) because there is less market competition compared to industry standard...
I have no interest in pushing my views on anyone but you asked me a question, so here it goes:
To me, the nanny state is obsessed over our personal lives wasting resources on victimless crimes. As I age, I lean more and more to anarchist views...
I don't understand the persistent desire of it being in the base system. It makes me suspect corporate involvement. What exactly is it supposed to do, that apparently isn't possible while it's an external program? Are we sure that no other...
The updates and patches are downloaded and stored in /var/db/freebsd-update/. The install phase loads them from there.
Saying 'no' to the proposed changes stops the entire upgrade process. Your freebsd-update .... upgrade never "finished", so...
Given that you've already identified it as an untrustworthy machine, I don't really think it matters. Just properly isolate/firewall it, so that it cannot be used as a spearhead for further incursions.
I don't understand the persistent desire of it being in the base system. It makes me suspect corporate involvement. What exactly is it supposed to do, that apparently isn't possible while it's an external program? Are we sure that no other...
They probably are thinking comparatively to Rails or Node.js, as many on-premise webapps in the self-hosting circles are written with those. Lemmy is an ActivityPub-based software, for which the big dominant big brother, Mastodon, is a Rails app...
They probably are thinking comparatively to Rails or Node.js, as many on-premise webapps in the self-hosting circles are written with those. Lemmy is an ActivityPub-based software, for which the big dominant big brother, Mastodon, is a Rails app...
They probably are thinking comparatively to Rails or Node.js, as many on-premise webapps in the self-hosting circles are written with those. Lemmy is an ActivityPub-based software, for which the big dominant big brother, Mastodon, is a Rails app...
FreeBSD actually works fine with readonly filesystems, Things like logging will fail. It can't write a new /etc/resolv.conf etc but it will still run fine.
With my NFS boot readonly would be easy to implement. But I don't want to cripple the...
CPU time is pretty low although not as low as a good C or C++ program.
The way that linking works makes the binaries bigger than C. C++ of course can be bloaty. Off-hand I don't know whether a modern C++ program or a Rust program come out bigger.
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