i was really pumped about using ntopng and installed it on my nat box but it's super cpu-intensive even on a 150mbps uplink and it's not free software (and even the community edition will stop collecting because the sniffers are just demos and don't have a community edition) so now it's purged and never to be used again.
@arh test one two
bought a flight from BA, first leg was operated by AA. AA took off, did a U turn, landed at origin. gate agent said he had no information about the flight or replacements, to the whole plane. he, nor any other AA staff, was anywhere to be found anywhere in the secure zone of the airport. waited hour, left airport, booked new ticket on not-BA/AA for the next day. didn't get luggage back for over 9 weeks.
american express says ba gets to keep my $2612. BA.
An interesting form of the sharpshooter fallacy is what I like to call the "doomsayer fallacy". It works like this:
Thing happens. Doomsayer: "this means bad thing will happen!".
If bad thing happens, Doomsayer gets credibility for being right
If bad thing does not happen, Doomsayer gets credibility either by claiming "it almost happened but we were lucky", or through "listening to my warning about the bad thing meant that we were able to stop bad thing"
It's tricky partly because sometimes those claims are actually true, but more often it's a Doomsayer PR campaign
I have a mid-2019 8c INTEL i9, 64GB ram 4TB flash Retina MacBook Pro for sale. It's MacBookPro16,1, with the good keyboard back (not the shitty butterfly one). This is the last intel/touchbar MacBook Pro, and these specs are maxxed out.
It is in excellent condition (I have hardly used it, my laptops don't see much action in this almost-no-travel pandemic timeline) with one owner and it has cool stickers (which can be removed if you like).
sneak@sneak.berlin if you are interested, please.
Hacker, researcher, entrepreneur. Make sure we're connected at https://sneak.berlin/list
these toots are also available at https://s.sneak.berlin/@sneak.rss if you're into that.