Skip to main content




21 Dec: FROM BAD TO WORSE. North Koreans Try a New Tactic. REGRET IMMEDIATELY.

Today there are a lot of interesting updates from the Kursk direction.

As the russian and North Korean assaults at Kruglyenke proved to be nothing short of a disaster, with both attacking sides suffering tremendous losses,

Reporting from Ukraine / Youtube

youtu.be/pTla7rPqWNo?si=p_n49y…

in reply to Eugene McParland 🇺🇦

russian commanders decided to redirect their North Korean human waves to another part of the salient. However, their tactics hadn't changed, and with Ukrainians now being well prepared for the North Korean mass charge, the end result seems even worse than before.




This entry was edited (1 year ago)


Become an EFF member today to:
📱 Protect digital privacy and free expression
🎁 Choose member swag
✨ Help us reach our Year-End Challenge goal

Give today and support digital freedoms for all! eff.org/YEC



Happy Solstice! However you celebrate the dying days of an old year, we hope that you are able to do so in comfort and with the hope of better things, creative works, and curious explorations to come. :)



A sea shanty about the stupid truck is exactly what I needed today

blaine_strange @ :tiktok:

reshared this



Volubilis was the Western-most Roman city (in present-day Morocco). A Berber king named Juba II once reined over this city. Juba was raised by two Roman emperors (Julius Caesar, and later Octavian), was an academic and scholar and was married to Cleopatra Selene II, daughter of Mark Antony and Cleopatra VII. Now this cat rules the city. #Caturday
in reply to Mike Elgan

Wow, that is come kind of pedigree. Seems like Juba was meant to rule something.



Is using an HDD with an SSD as cache on Linux a good idea?


I currently have a 1 TiB NVMe drive that has been hovering at 100 GiB left for the past couple months. I've kept it down by deleting a game every couple weeks, but I would like to play something sometime, and I'm running out of games to delete if I need more space.

That's why I've been thinking about upgrading to a 2 TiB drive, but I just saw an interesting forum thread about LVM cache. The promise of having the storage capacity of an HDD with (usually) the speed of an SSD seems very appealing, but is it actually as good as it seems to be?

And if it is possible, which software should be used? LVM cache seems like a decent option, but I've seen people say it's slow. bcache is also sometimes mentioned, but apparently that one can be unreliable at times.

Beyond that, what method should be used? The Arch Wiki page for bcache mentions several options. Some only seem to cache writes, while some aim to keep the HDD idle as long as possible.

Also, does anyone run a setup like this themselves?

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to qaz

if by cache you mean that your entire system is on your drive and that the hdd is for backups or games that you're not currently playing but don't want to reinstall, yes.
in reply to qaz

I was using this kind of a setup a long time ago with 120GB SSD and 1TB HDD. I've found the overall speedup pretty remarkable. It felt like a 1TB SSD most of the time.
So, having a cache drive of around 10% of the main drive seems like a good size to cost compromise. Having a cache 50% size of the basic storage feels like a waste to me.







putin’s Ukraine obsession began 20 years ago with the Orange Revolution

By Peter Dickinson

"putin’s desire to crush #Ukraine first began to take shape two decades ago as he watched the Ukrainian people defy their own authoritarian rulers and demand a democratic future."

atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukra…

in reply to Eugene McParland 🇺🇦

So many folks miss this. Given the Russian self image as an empire, that Ukraine was not part of the empire was a 'temporary setback' until it the Orange Revolution showed that it was never coming back.
in reply to Eugene McParland 🇺🇦

It is not an obsession.

It is the reaction of a mafia clan leader when noticing that he is losing parts of his sphere of control and financial exploitation.



in reply to wakejagr

No. It is a document sorting and collation scheme. The designation 'greenprint' means it contains all necessary information for understanding and doing immediate implementation. It is my attempt to nix to disjointed reference materials and information overload.

The ID is just a hash of document data. I haven't published the scheme for that yet because I am designing a purpose-built hash function made specially for it. I haven't had time to finish it up and write a greenprint for it yet.

See here (scroll down): soc.octade.net/octade/p/173527…

This entry was edited (11 months ago)
in reply to OCTADE

Thank you for the info.

I like the concept; it compares favorably to the requirements document that I'm familiar with. As i see it, the requirements document is "this describes what the resulting item needs to do," rather than "this contains all necessary information for understanding and doing immediate implementation."

It seems like that approach might help avoid problems.