Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | firesteelrain's comments login

Being here illegally is breaking the law and is a crime.

Always wanted to do this but if I get a call from home and I am either

1) at work 2) out of town 3) or just not home

Then, my family's ability to troubleshoot if PiHole goes down is extremely limited. Even if I had two.


What black-swan event would cause would 2 PiHoles go down simultaneously? You could always use a non-PiHole guest-network if your WiFi hardware supports it, and let your family know to use the guest network if the regular network is down. The manual switching might not be necessary as most computers, phones and tablets automatically disassociate from a WiFi network if it's "offline", such as when DNS resolution fails.

I run Wireguard in combination with Pi-Hole so I can VPN into my home network to configure anything I need. DuckDNS if you’re on a dynamic DNS provider. It’s also nice to have this since you can get the adblocking when away from home.

They could just switch their dns back to auto (or statically use google/cloudflare/etc depending on how you configure it), no? Then fix it when you’re back.

You could also set up 2 ssids depending on your WiFi set up. Point one to pi hole and the other to a different DNS provider. Instruction if pi hole breaks is just switch WiFi.


One work-around is to get them to modify their wifi connection to use a specific DNS (e.g. Google at 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 is easy to remember).

I run Pi-hole in docker on a NanoPi that I setup as my router (running OpenWRT). In the rare occurrence that it misbehaves, I could just tell my spouse to power cycle it. I did think of having a failover, but there's always going to be a single point of failure with my ISP router anyhow.


Where I am at, you can learn a skill in high school either via elective or a career technical track like working on airplanes, HVAC, construction, etc. Back in the 90s, I took automotive electives because I liked to work on cars back then. It would prepare you to work at a small automotive shop or as a hobby. I realized that it didn't make that much money so switched to computers.

And by my school years in the 00's those programs were slashed across the nation thanks to Bush. They just kept putting down the blue collar work and encouraged everyone to go to college. Right as they make student loans unbankruptale.

Always follow the money


They are still around and I am in a Red state.

I enjoying the freeing Live Photos. Sometimes I wish they were just a little longer.

I forgot most of this but looking into the BBS software at the time, it looks like most of it was based on Pascal. Apparently very popular at the time

Pascal was poised to be the de facto language for microcomputers back in the 80s and early 90s. It really could have gone either way.

I'm not sure what tipped the balance to C/C++. Maybe the Microsoft compilers? Maybe the merge of the minicomputer world into microcomputers? Either way, Pascal held on (via Delphi) into the early 2000s.


2007-2012 I was still writing code in Borland C++ Builder 5 which shared a lot of code libraries with Delphi.

Our microcontroller code was written in Turbo C++


At work we use Arena to model various systems and Poisson is our go to.

TIAMS (mentioned in article) stopped broadcasting I thought. RNEI and Radio Carptha took over. You can hear it on WRMI out of Florida every week.

https://swling.com/blog/2023/08/radio-carpathia-and-rnei-to-...

Bob Catface (https://bsky.app/profile/bobcatface.bsky.social) has a Discord (Mostly Shortwave Discord: discord.gg/fr4Uuw4z5h) where you can receive notices when these come on the air. If you are a ham radio operator or SWL, you can decode MSFK usually with these shows.


I am really curious what their testing suite looks like. How do you test for sycophants?

One simple test is that you give the model a really bad idea and tell it the idea is yours. You then test that the model does not say it's good.

The now rolled back model failed spectacularly on this test


It’s beginner adverse site today. It’s got a lot of great existing questions and answers though

6 days ago there was the Hegseth article regarding this being hotly debated in here and it’s a great example of not having all the facts before jumping to conclusions. Part of the debate was regarding archiving of messages which now apparently there is a way to archive Signal messages automatically. Huh who would have figured

Great motivated thinking, but wrong.

It would appear they're using this app now, post-incident, because they got in trouble. (And having messages with Vance, Gabbard, etc. be visible to the press pool camera is... not a great look for the guy who accidentally added a reporter.)

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/15/us/politics/cia-director-...

> All of the messages from a leaked group chat have been deleted from the phone of John Ratcliffe, the C.I.A. director, the agency said in a court filing.


Those are just accusations from a 3rd party agency. They have no way of knowing if Ratcliffe archived the messages before deleting. Signal has been approved since the Biden admin. It was most likely already distributed with the Telemessage feature.

“the agency said in a court filing”

The agency is the CIA, to a court, saying the messages are gone.


> Signal has been approved since the Biden admin. It was most likely already distributed with the Telemessage feature.

How do you know this? Also I would not consider this a “feature”. We should assume they’re different apps, insofar as Telemessage can add whatever they please to the source


"One of the things I was briefed on very early … was by the CIA records management folks about the use of Signal as a permissible work use," Ratcliffe said during a March 25 Senate Intelligence Committee hearing (see 45:05). "It is. That is a practice that preceded the current administration to the Biden administration."

https://www.c-span.org/program/senate-committee/dni-director...


Exhaling air through flappy mouth and throat parts is also permissible in the CIA.

That doesn’t mean you won’t get in trouble if you flap them in a way that says “we bomb x at y o’clock” where uncleared people can hear.


Sure, but that’s the point-Signal is permitted; it’s the content that matters, not the medium. Ratcliffe's testimony confirms it’s been standard practice across administrations. It’s already approved in IC circles despite your claims it harms national security.

Join us for AI Startup School this June 16-17 in San Francisco!

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: