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Post by brokenkey on Mar 22, 2022 18:39:17 GMT
Do they get free graphics cards?
Edit. Send me a card and I'll write you the drivers as part of my job interview. If there aren't the best you've seen, you don't have to pay me.
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dmukgr
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Post by dmukgr on Mar 22, 2022 18:44:07 GMT
Do they get free graphics cards? Edit. Send me a card and I'll write you the drivers as part of my job interview. If there aren't the best you've seen, you don't have to pay me. Without a driver the card wouldn’t be much use to you so it wouldn’t be a good scam that.
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Post by brokenkey on Mar 22, 2022 19:50:44 GMT
Long game... You'll release a driver for it eventually 😉
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dogbot
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Post by dogbot on Mar 24, 2022 11:27:38 GMT
Genuinely not a joke.
CEO of our group: "We MUST get rid of Kaspersky within the next 6 weeks" Also CEO of our group: "What do you mean it's going to cost money to do this?"
Fuckwit.
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Bongo Heracles
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Post by Bongo Heracles on Mar 24, 2022 11:33:59 GMT
I was joking when I said that yesterday
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Post by dominalien on Mar 24, 2022 11:41:52 GMT
Because of the war?
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Bongo Heracles
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Post by Bongo Heracles on Mar 24, 2022 11:55:50 GMT
Kaspersky has always been a no-no in terms of security. They have frequently been accused of being an arm (or if not an arm, a middle finger) of russian state security. The actual product isnt bad but, similar with using huawei for core comms infrastructure, there is a decent chance that they can and will syphon data if they want to.
So, yeah, that probably goes double now.
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dogbot
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Post by dogbot on Mar 24, 2022 11:59:05 GMT
The short answer is yes, but there's been a growing lack of appetite for Russia/China-based software in the security sphere for a while. It's not surprising that it's happening, it's just that recent events have brought it to the notice of management rather than tech teams. I've been looking to get it removed for 3 years, but it wasn't my decision ultimately.
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スコットランド
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Delicious gruel
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Post by スコットランド on Mar 24, 2022 12:07:41 GMT
Recently I've been working on an application with an Angular Frontend, it's working ok but is quite dull looking. Anyone have any online suggestions of info to improve beautifying skills?
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Post by dominalien on Mar 24, 2022 14:26:39 GMT
The short answer is yes, but there's been a growing lack of appetite for Russia/China-based software in the security sphere for a while. It's not surprising that it's happening, it's just that recent events have brought it to the notice of management rather than tech teams. I've been looking to get it removed for 3 years, but it wasn't my decision ultimately. I’ve been out of the loop for at least 10-15 years now, what’s the antivirus software all the cool kids use these days? Edit: would the answer be whatever’s built into Windows now?
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Post by spacein_vader on Mar 24, 2022 14:54:38 GMT
The short answer is yes, but there's been a growing lack of appetite for Russia/China-based software in the security sphere for a while. It's not surprising that it's happening, it's just that recent events have brought it to the notice of management rather than tech teams. I've been looking to get it removed for 3 years, but it wasn't my decision ultimately. I’ve been out of the loop for at least 10-15 years now, what’s the antivirus software all the cool kids use these days? Edit: would the answer be whatever’s built into Windows now? Yes. Windows Defender is no better or worse than the rest. It's also less likely to pop up and tell you it's doing things like scanning, presumably as it doesn't need to prove its doing things so you keep subscribing.
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dogbot
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Post by dogbot on Mar 24, 2022 15:00:45 GMT
You might be asking the wrong person about cool kids, but Defender is not really considered a viable enterprise product (e2a, to the best of my knowledge, it's fine for home usage). There are MS products in 365 (eg, 365 EDR) which are, though, so this is not an anti-Microsoft thing, by any means.
The list of replacements is currently: Sophos (Intercept X EDR), BitDefender (which is probably a bit Niche), Crowdstrike (Falcon Insight) and Cybereason XDR.
I have no real knowledge of any of these, we'll be getting demos next week.
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Post by dominalien on Mar 24, 2022 15:38:48 GMT
Huh. Must be cool working somewhere that actually has money for such things. I just use a wire cutter if there’s an attack.
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Bongo Heracles
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Post by Bongo Heracles on Mar 24, 2022 15:45:38 GMT
We use MDE as our EDR. Its actually pretty good.
Except last week when MS pushed out an O365 office update which MS then categorised as ransomware and threw up a high 'holy shit! Ransomeware!' for hundreds of laptops and took them six hours to downgrade the file back down to 'its just xml'
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Bongo Heracles
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Post by Bongo Heracles on Mar 25, 2022 10:19:10 GMT
No, just MITRE TTPS.
T1053.005 T1218.011 T1486 T1490
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Post by dfunked on Mar 25, 2022 10:20:17 GMT
This thread is acronym porn
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Post by Dougs on Mar 25, 2022 10:29:17 GMT
Keep going...
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dogbot
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Post by dogbot on Mar 25, 2022 10:31:02 GMT
You excited by a good IPS/IDS, Dougs? Fancy a SIEM with XDR? Does a BCP DR plan do it for you?
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dogbot
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Post by dogbot on Mar 25, 2022 10:31:35 GMT
Don't get him started on the AWS AZs with ASGs and a NLB.
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Post by Dougs on Mar 25, 2022 10:32:13 GMT
And spent.
(I have no idea what any of that means, but all civil servants love a good acronym)
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dogbot
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Post by dogbot on Mar 25, 2022 11:46:59 GMT
AaaS. Glad to be of service.
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mrpon
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Post by mrpon on Mar 25, 2022 11:58:27 GMT
Sounds like all the recruiting emails I get: S3, RDS, Cognito, Route 53, CloudWatch, Athena, LAMP, Bash, Git, Docker, Drupal, Gremlin, Jenkins.
Pretty sure half of those are made up. Or characters in the next Guy Ritchie movie.
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Post by dfunked on Mar 25, 2022 12:03:15 GMT
I love LAMP
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dogbot
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Post by dogbot on Mar 25, 2022 12:04:11 GMT
The first ones are all AWS: S3 is storage, RDS is relational databasing, Cognito is authentication, Route53 is DNS, CloudWatch is monitoring, Athena is query analysis. LAMP = Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP Bash is a Linux/UNIX shell (Bourne-Again SHell). Git is a software repository. Docker is for containerisation. Drupal is a CMS. No idea about Gremlin and Jenkins is a GNU automation server. HTH.
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askew
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Post by askew on Mar 25, 2022 12:06:08 GMT
Recently I've been working on an application with an Angular Frontend, it's working ok but is quite dull looking. Anyone have any online suggestions of info to improve beautifying skills?
What do you want to improve: design skills, CSS, or how to use a CSS framework? Pretty sure CodeAcademy has a CSS course, or Google's web.dev.
Writing CSS is one thing: composing those selectors together into something that looks good is another, in which case Bootstrap, or Material frameworks will have done the heavy lifting for you.
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askew
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Post by askew on Mar 25, 2022 12:06:50 GMT
Sounds like all the recruiting emails I get: S3, RDS, Cognito, Route 53, CloudWatch, Athena, LAMP, Bash, Git, Docker, Drupal, Gremlin, Jenkins. Pretty sure half of those are made up. Or characters in the next Guy Ritchie movie.
"I need 10 years experience in k8s"
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スコットランド
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Post by スコットランド on Mar 25, 2022 12:48:12 GMT
Recently I've been working on an application with an Angular Frontend, it's working ok but is quite dull looking. Anyone have any online suggestions of info to improve beautifying skills?
What do you want to improve: design skills, CSS, or how to use a CSS framework? Pretty sure CodeAcademy has a CSS course, or Google's web.dev.
Writing CSS is one thing: composing those selectors together into something that looks good is another, in which case Bootstrap, or Material frameworks will have done the heavy lifting for you.
It's more design skills, I could do with improving everything of course but more layout, use of colour etc. at first
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スコットランド
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Delicious gruel
Posts: 3,934
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Post by スコットランド on Mar 25, 2022 12:49:52 GMT
Sounds like all the recruiting emails I get: S3, RDS, Cognito, Route 53, CloudWatch, Athena, LAMP, Bash, Git, Docker, Drupal, Gremlin, Jenkins. Pretty sure half of those are made up. Or characters in the next Guy Ritchie movie. Have half of those, no idea at all about the other half. Cognito and Route 53 are films, surely.
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dogbot
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Post by dogbot on Mar 25, 2022 12:53:14 GMT
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askew
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Post by askew on Mar 25, 2022 15:09:30 GMT
What do you want to improve: design skills, CSS, or how to use a CSS framework? Pretty sure CodeAcademy has a CSS course, or Google's web.dev.
Writing CSS is one thing: composing those selectors together into something that looks good is another, in which case Bootstrap, or Material frameworks will have done the heavy lifting for you.
It's more design skills, I could do with improving everything of course but more layout, use of colour etc. at first
Tried to find a good one-stop shop for this kind of thing, but struggling because of the sheer number of concepts: stuff like grid theory; typography; colour theory; design heuristics. I've never taken a formal design course to learn how it might be taught. I thought the following might offer something, though:
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