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A former Gizmodo writer changed his name to ‘Slackbot’ and stayed undetected for months
  • Not necessarily to justify Gizmodo in this instance, but Slack does paywall their SSO feature behind their Business+ Plan, which seems to currently run $12.50/mo/user, which is about a 70% increase from their next pricing tier. See: https://slack.com/pricing

    Given the price difference I wouldn't be surprised if they didn't want to pay for that.

    Edit: someone later in the thread linked this page which helps explain why this is generally a bad practice https://sso.tax/

  • Seeking new moderators for abandoned communities
  • In these specific instances I agree with you. The few I looked at were just single or no post communities. I think the mods just want to give these a chance in case anyone actually does want to take them over and breathe some life into them.

    In general though, I think it's healthy for the fediverse to have options, even with similar topics. I'm sure you might recall situations on Reddit where people didn't like how a sub was moderated, so some people would set up r/TRUEwhatever.

  • Currently unobtainable Baldur's Gate 3 achievement teases a hardcore permadeath mode that I will never be brave enough to play
  • Big agree. I had my fair share of needing to save scum because the game bugged out e.g. characters stuck inside walls or objects, actions not executing properly, etc.

    Hopefully by the time they release the patch with this new difficulty option the game will have enough polish that it can be played in true ironman fashion.

  • Windows deployment
  • There are different solutions depending on the scale and scope.

    At the minimum, you can look at just modifying the unattend.xml file to automate a USB install. This will give some simple features like configuring licensing and generally being able to skip the oobe (out of box experience) wizard.

    Next level up is modifying the install.wim file on that USB install. This will afford some more customisability like taking a sysprepped captured image, like what you're describing. You don't need a WDS server for this, but if you're going this deep you might as well move up to one for the automation it brings to that captured image workflow.

    Next level up is setting up a WDS (Windows Deployment Services) server, which can just be a dedicated VM or a dedicated physical machine somewhere on the network. This has all the benefits of the above but with better automation and network booting (which replaces your USB with just needing a network connection) and automatic AD join.

    At the top of those enterprise scale solutions is SCCM (now called MECM) or InTune, depending how you want to work things. Setting up one of these is probably way beyond your scope though.

    Things get more complicated the further up you go, but come with more benefits. If you're looking for a minimum effort solution, I'd just build a bootable USB with rufus and modify the unattend.xml, save that file somewhere so you don't have to do it again and just copy it onto any new drive you build.

    I might be forgetting something so hopefully something in the comments here helps you in your current situation. cheers

  • Relay users are now paying up to 4.99$ per month to use Reddit API
  • I totally agree. I wasn't decided on quitting Reddit just because of the 3rd party apps fiasco, but the overall quality of the content took a nosedive which only further reinforced my decision to uninstall Relay once the subs finally came.

    At a cost of free it was still like of worth checking out but not if I have to pay.

  • Relay users are now paying up to 4.99$ per month to use Reddit API
  • Former Relay user here.

    Willing to bet the comments in that thread are positive because survivorship bias, at least in part. Folks like me who deleted the app probably wouldn't have commented, after all. I'm also sure I wasn't the only one to see the subscription prompt come up and just delete the app.

    knew it was coming and decided ahead of time that when I was forced to pay, I'd just delete the app.

  • Reddit abandons user privacy - Ars Technica
  • Ars and Reddit are under the same parent company, conde nast or however that's all structured. I also have noticed ars seems to write very frequently about Reddit, even if it is usually in a critical light.

    I get mixed feelings about articles like this one.

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