b1ab

joined 1 year ago
[–] b1ab@lem.monster 23 points 1 year ago

The prices are going up for every provider. It’s across the board. Porkbun.com too.

[–] b1ab@lem.monster 1 points 1 year ago

I thought the same thing. I can only imagine police departments are being sold an elaborate tall tale of how this will save money and the accuracy is unbelievably high.

[–] b1ab@lem.monster 6 points 1 year ago

Paragraph 3. They did, just not in the last 6 years.

[–] b1ab@lem.monster 1 points 1 year ago

Right on. Gotcha.

[–] b1ab@lem.monster 1 points 1 year ago

Hahaha. Yea. Been there too.

[–] b1ab@lem.monster 27 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Totally agree.

I think we should all strive to do better. Unit tests, mock-ups, UX design, 2 week sprints with actual working deliverables, well documented use cases, every thing neatly stacked in Jira, dev,test,staging,prod environments, continuous integration and every thing else we are told to do.

Then reality sets in……

With all that said, 25 years as a dev, this utopian environment is almost impossible to find unless forced by regulatory compliance. Medical devices, life critical systems, etc. or if you have big piles of money.

[–] b1ab@lem.monster 2 points 1 year ago

Yep. I’ve been there.

[–] b1ab@lem.monster 6 points 1 year ago

This is very true.

Unfortunately most product managers SUCK at designing or making software.

Agile tries to fix this be supporting frequent iteration.

Unfortunately most programmers SUCK at writing good code.

TDD tries to fix this by forcing the consideration of end results (testing) at the beginning. It forces programmers and product teams to actually think and work. Make clear design decisions earlier on, but not to the point of waterfall.

It’s just a giant cesspool of failure due to human laziness that usually falls on the shoulders of QA.

Bottom line, making good software is hard. It takes time. But the market won’t support slow development. The business and sales teams remind me of Veruca Salt in Willy Wonka.

[–] b1ab@lem.monster 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Fair point. Malware can tunnel through existing comms, thus firewalling the exe would do little to protect you.

That’s why I recommended a multilayered defense and practicing good opsec.

An exe that installs a service, modifies unrelated executables, and sends comms through an unrelated application would be a catastrophic failure in any good defense.

If your system is this wide open then you’ll be likely to have all sorts of problems from non pirated software. Such as freeware that installs adware.

I have tried to find these in the wild to no avail.

[–] b1ab@lem.monster 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Can you provide some examples of what you are looking for? There are a handful of private edu trackers that may have the content you desire.

[–] b1ab@lem.monster 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I sorta agree with @darcy. The quality of FOSS (nowadays) is pretty damn good. If I need something I look at FOSS first, dig in github, and then finally look around for a paid program.

Edit to say "paid" program.

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