03:08 < bridge> [ddnet] @TsFreddie 03:11 < bridge> [ddnet] @lynn 07:08 < bridge> [ddnet] anyone know how to set up a trashmap server on a vps? 07:08 < bridge> [ddnet] from forum: 07:08 < bridge> [ddnet] 07:08 < bridge> [ddnet] > by deen » Sat Oct 27, 2018 11:08 pm 07:08 < bridge> [ddnet] > https://github.com/timakro/ddnet-trashmap 07:08 < bridge> [ddnet] > 07:08 < bridge> [ddnet] > You can use this to install your own custom Trashmap instance. I'm not running one on the official DDNet RUS server since it's already pretty weak resource wise. If you have specific questions timakro and I could help since we both set it up at least once I guess. From my memory: 07:08 < bridge> [ddnet] > 07:08 < bridge> [ddnet] > Create a user "trashmap" with home direct ory /srv/trashmap. Clone the git repo into that directory directly. Put the nginx config into your /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/. Put a DDNet-Server executable in /srv/trashmap/srv directory. Probably I forgot a few steps. 07:09 < bridge> [ddnet] or maybe i could just sponsor a usa trashmap for ddnet 08:52 < bridge> [ddnet] Yeah, it's possible to run it, but not so easy 08:52 < bridge> [ddnet] Some small server for 5 € / month from Linode would probably be ok for it. Not sure where to reach timakro if you want him to run it 20:35 < bridge> [ddnet] https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2021/06/an-epyc-escape-case-study-of-kvm.html 20:44 <+bridge> [ddnet] man i rly hate blogspot 20:44 <+bridge> [ddnet] it always looks so awful 20:45 <+bridge> [ddnet] the content behind the link is nice though 🙂 20:46 <+bridge> [ddnet] i found lot of rly good old tech are in blogspot 20:46 <+bridge> [ddnet] but i cant bring myself to read that 20:46 <+bridge> [ddnet] you could try reader mode, it'll probably fuck up the code blocks 20:46 <+bridge> [ddnet] though 20:46 <+bridge> [ddnet] https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/293493549758939136/859505158215827488/unknown.png 20:46 <+bridge> [ddnet] the code blocks were optional though, can read w/o 20:47 <+bridge> [ddnet] reader mode actually makes this good 21:14 <+bridge> [ddnet] https://copilot.github.com/ 21:14 <+bridge> [ddnet] scary 21:14 <+bridge> [ddnet] our jobs are in danger 21:17 <+bridge> [ddnet] holy shit 21:23 <+bridge> [ddnet] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Te5rOTcE4J4 21:23 <+bridge> [ddnet] it's just a dumb AI, don't worry 🙂 22:00 <+bridge> [ddnet] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27676266 22:00 <+bridge> [ddnet] ppl are impressed 22:00 <+bridge> [ddnet] 700 comments on HN 22:00 <+bridge> [ddnet] > I've been using the alpha for the past 2 weeks, and I'm blown away. Copilot guesses the exact code I want to write about one in ten times, and the rest of the time it suggests something rather good, or completely off. But when it guesses right, it feels like it's reading my mind. 22:00 <+bridge> [ddnet] > 22:00 <+bridge> [ddnet] > It's really like pair programming, even though I'm coding alone. I have a better understanding of my own code, and I tend to give better names and descriptions to my methods. I write better code, documentation, and tests. 22:00 <+bridge> [ddnet] > 22:01 <+bridge> [ddnet] > Copilot has made me a better programmer. No kidding. This is a huge achievement. Kudos to the GitHub Copilot team! 22:06 <+bridge> [ddnet] many skeptical comments are there as well 22:07 <+bridge> [ddnet] > Automation has always produced an increase in jobs so far, although sometimes in a disruptive way. I consider this like the switch from instruction-level programming to compiled languages, a level of abstraction added that buys a large increase in productivity and makes projects affordable that weren’t affordable before. If anything this will probably lead to a boom in development work. But there’s a bunch of low skill programmers who 22:10 <+bridge> [ddnet] ye 22:21 <+bridge> [ddnet] https://github.com/irsl/gcp-dhcp-takeover-code-exec 22:21 <+bridge> [ddnet] :monkaS: