This channel will contain content about various tech related topics. We will cover Windows, Linux, Hacking (Offensive Security), Virtualization, Programming, Task Automation, Artificial Intelligence, Technical Reviews, Technical Recommendations, and more.
The goal of this channel is to provide educational, informational, informative, and entertaining content for the community. I have over a decade of experience in the field, multiple degrees, and multiple certifications. I would love to share all that I have learned with the community. This will be a two-way road as I look forward to interacting with you all and learning from you as well.
This is mind-blowing! The idea of a robot with a partially biological brain is both fascinating and terrifying.Oh Indian companies are in this interesting..development of a general-purpose AI brain for robots is a major step forward, but we need to make sure that these robots are used for good and not for evil
Pin this comment for others who seek help. For all the people trying this : please do not allocate 54 gb worth of persistence to your USB . This will only provide your actual operating system with only 4gb worth of actual storage . Allocate something like 14 or 16 gigs to persistence . Leave the rest for your system to use . This would make your experience much smoother .
The main issue with symlinking anything between the WSL filesystem and external Windows resources is horrible performance. In fact, when it comes to performance of sharing resources between WSL and Windows, WSL2 is greatly outperformed even by the old WSL1. Now someone might ask why is this relevant when you can simply keep all your files inside the WSL machine and be done with it? First and foremost, at some point most people will want to have some kind of external backup of the files stored inside WSL2. This is where WSL2 starts to show it's ugly face because no matter what you do you are bound to end up with extremely poor performance and the backup process might take ten times more time due to the fact that the I/O performance of the underlying 9P protocol is just bad. Secondly, if you are dealing with any kind of software development with a codebase which benefits from being accessible from both Linux and Windows and you don't wan't to duplicate your code inside WSL2 to experience it's almost native performance, you might consider just symlinking between Linux and Windows. Then when you try to run a package manager like pip, npm, composer etc. you realize that those operations can take 10-20 times more than usual. The other nasty issue of WSL2 is how networking is done, specifically the fact that unlike WSL1, where network adapters were directly exposed to both Windows and WSL, in WSL2 everything is sitting behind a NAT, which means that simply opening access to resources inside WSL2 require additional steps on the Windows side. To cut the long story short, despite my initial excitement when WSL was first announced and released over the years I realized that I could have had the real thing instead of expecting WSL to become something it wil never be. The complete neglicence on Microsoft's part didn't help either. Therefore I've switched to Linux as my primary workstation a couple of years ago and to be honest, I couldn't be happier. Now, your mileage may vary but just considering the real thing might actually be worth looking into if you are dealing with any kind of software development. / my two strips of gold pressed latinum
Windows putting out something "new" huh. Well I have an invention too! I have invented: The Wheel. What's that? It's already invented? Well why the hell are we calling any of these windows features "new"? New feature: change mouse scrolling direction. What is this the 80s?
What's your budget? If you want to build one yourself, I would look into an NVME PCIE drive in a USB 3.2 Gen 2 enclosure. I am working on my next USB right now, and this will be the best one yet, using an NVME PCIE drive in a USB 3.2 Gen 2 enclosure and adding AI to run locally on the stick. If you want a traditional USB, get a 3.2 Gen 2 with USB C. THKAiLAR and TRANSCEND both make really solid 3.2 gen 2 drives for a decent price. If you are on a tight budget, you can look at kootion for a decent drive (3.2 gen 1). I will be doing another video when I get a little more progress on my latest drive.
There is nothing you are doing that would be interesting to anyone. If you want to run Linux, then replace Windows with Linux. In fact your better off using DOS.
@@theit-unicorn1873 as you were nice to reply, so will i 😉 When I saw the thumbnail i expected to at least see the object in question in the video. Cool if it will end up looking like the thumbnail 👍 Good luck!
Wow! This video is a great introduction to quantum computing. I especially liked the part about the different types of quantum computers that are being developed by companies like IBM and Google. Keep up the great work bro!
Thinking about buying the Ultimate USB v2 and have a few questions. Are all the ISOs functional, or will I need to pay for some to work or only work for Limited time? Also, do they come with instructions on how to use the ISOs? I'm new to this and this usb seems like it has more on it than i used before, so please be kind in the comments.
This is super cool and way beyond my skill level lol! But i was thinking you might be able to tune the voice/servo control/movements with the actual linkages from the servo to the jaw. Different length linkages, pivot points for faster or slower movements. Its kind of hard to explain in text but i feel you will understand what im trying to say lol ready to follow this build 🤘
Great video :) A trick I always use to get quick access to the WSL filesystem is to open WSL in the terminal and just run “explorer.exe .” as the windows PATH is available (at least in my configuration). I keep apps fullscreened so I barely ever see my desktop at all lol. Symbolic links are definitely a great way to avoid going through /mnt/c/{7 more folders}.
Kali and Windows? You definitely can, here's a video I made a while back. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-74vqPirHqOk.htmlsi=HCICtjiQu4ky8N3o
Nope it wasn't a global outage and my Friday was blue screen free because I run exclusively Linux on my servers. No Windows, No BlueScreens, No CloudStrike.
This is really cool bro! I'm a big fan of Raspberry Pi.Great start to your Halloween animatronic😃I am planning to buy pi but the cost is little High here 🥴
Thanks bro! I'll update as I make progress. Yeah, if you can find one on sale, I'd recommend picking one up, there's so much you can do with it. If I get to 10k before 2025, I will be giving one away!
The sheer gall of Crowdstrike stating "a fix has been deployed" - nothing short of mobilizing an army to to manually recover all the devices they bricked could be considered _deploying_ a fix to this mess.
@@mallninja9805 You are not held hostage and forced to work for your company, even if they are so backwards as to not listen to a logical argument. Voting is not how we change bad technical decisions, logic is. Technical problems are solved with reason not feelings.
Thanks for this - where did you get the Eset ISO? FYI - I think they only have a exe file now which requires internet and not sure how to laod that as a bootable image....C
If I remember correctly, you can get the ISO from ESET, they want you to use a tool to create the USB, but it's not necessary. Worst case, you can extract the image from the USB if needed. Also, it's on MajorGeeks. www.majorgeeks.com/files/details/eset_sysrescue.html www.eset.com/la/support/sysrescue/
You are mostly correct. 1) Microsoft granted WHQL certification for the CS driver, with ring 0 privileges. So if the app crashes, the OS halts with BSoD. 2) CS also got their driver on the list of "must run at boot" drivers, to prevent being disabled by malware. 3) CS was doing frequent updates of their database of signatures which included not just data, but coding. So the approved driver could end up being fed corrupted or trojan data and code, causing a reboot loop. 4) CS failed to do enough QA testing before the rollout to production. This sort of issue would have been pretty obvious if they did a simulated rollout to test machines. I understand why they don't want to do a phased rollout since they are trying to prevent 0-day exploits. 5) CS updates also bypassed the NT admin settings that prevent applying automatic updates. This is awfully risky and likely to lead to many lawsuits.
I have two clients using Falcon. I got the call at 5am and was not sure what the problem was. The memory dump just said kernel fault. Got into safe mode and saw that Falcon had been updated so I got the installer running in safe mode and uninstalled it just to get them back up. I had to do that with several servers then later saw the documentation on which file to delete. I'm always grumpy when i get woke up that early. Then the second client called and ask for help so that went quicker now that I knew the file that was to blame. I can't wait for our crowdstrike rep to call me and ask why I'm not selling more of their product.
@@theit-unicorn1873 yep those are the nights, we actually went with S1 they had me test Crowdstrike for about 1 week and I told them I did not like the interface as it was a little weird and for the price it should have been better glad we did not go that direction
I tried the matrix thing and when i double click on the icon the window pops up but then disapears in a split second, all i get to see is the frame of the window!
When I boot into fedora from both vlink and live iso, it recognizes my USB drive as being having 8mb free storage when in fact that drive is formated and it has 128GB free on it. I am trying to use that USB to install fedora using it's installer (provided by the os). Can anybody help me fix that?