• 1 Post
  • 15 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 18th, 2023

help-circle

  • I wouldn’t call Crowdstrike a corporate spyware garbage. I work as a Red Teamer in cybersecurity, and EDRs are bane of my existence - they are useful, and pretty good at what they do. In the last few years, I’m struggling more and more to with engagements we do, because EDRs just get in the way and catch a lot of what would pass undetected a month ago. Staying on top of them with our tooling is getting more and more difficult, and I would call that a good thing.

    I’ve recently tested a company without EDR, and boy was it a treat. Not defending Crowdstrike, to call that a major removedup is great understatement, but calling it “corporate spyware garbage” feels a little bit unfair - EDRs do make a difference, and this wasn’t an issue with their product in itself, but with irresponsibility of their patch management.


  • What you are describing is simply a bias from training dataset. The best way how to think abour LLM AI is that works in basically exactly the same way as if you keep mashing space on your phone keyboard, to give you text prediction (assuming your phone does that, mine always recommends next words when I type).

    Would my phone keyboard eventually start recommending words relogious words and phrases? Yes, it will, of I’m using those phrases often. Does it mean ny phone keyboard is religious? That sounds pretty weird, doesn’t it?

    And it’s not even a hyperbole, about this kind of text prediction being similar to how LLMs and AI works. It’s just math that gives you next word based on statistics of what would be most likely based on previous words. And that’s exactly what LLMs do, nothing more. The only difference is that my keyboard has been learning only on what I type, and in a little bit simpler way than LLMs are, but the goal and result is same for both - a text prediction.



  • Unfortunately, NVIDIA. I was buying a new PC half a year ago, and only started even considering to make the switch to Linux few months after that, so I am at a pretty unlucky point where I just had recently spent a lot of money for new-gen PC, but without knowing that I should really go for AMD.

    I will make the switch to AMD as soon as it’s justifiable, but I’m too lazy to deal with second-hand resale and it’s hard to justify a new GPU when I still have the current gen, but from wrong manufacturer.




  • I went with Fedora when switching almost a month ago now, and I’ve been having issues with some games not working as expected, and also had trouble getting NVIDIA drivers to work correctly (which I’ve already solved, I hope). (And some applications weren’t working at all, such as Unity)

    What would you consider as major advantages of Fedora, in addition to what you mentioned? So far, I usually couldn’t find a Fedora-specific version of the applications I wanted, unlike for other more well-known distributions. I do work as a programmer, which was also why I choose Fedora - I really like their Fedora Toolbox, but I would like to game regurarly on my PC and so far, it seems that Fedora doesn’t really handle it too well. Will I have similar issues on other distros, or will switching to something like Pop!OS be worth the time?

    EDIT: Just found out about Nobara, I guess I’ll give that one a try.





  • I’m also running NVIDIA (RTX 4070), and while I did have to try drivers from a few different sources, I eventually got it working pretty quickly.

    But my mistake was choosing an OS that doesn’t bundle non-free drivers (Fedora), from what I’ve heard some distros like Ubuntu come with NVIDIA support by default, so I guess that’s also an option.


  • I literally did this two weeks ago, switched Win11 for Fedora and so far it has been an amazing experience. So far, I only had to dual boot to Win once, and that was because I wanted to play some SteamVR games, which is the only thing I didn’t manage to get working (I know there’s ALVR, but SteamVR refuses to launch for me unfortunately).

    Just go for it, get a new SSD drive and dual boot your choice of distro. You can always go back, and unless you use bitlocker you can just access your windows files from the Linux, so there’s not need to move stuff around that much. With dualboot, you have nothing to loose.