As a programmer I mostly hate AI written software.
But I do think it’s great that non-programmers can do a lot of things that they never could before.
As a programmer I mostly hate AI written software.
But I do think it’s great that non-programmers can do a lot of things that they never could before.


There’s a bit about those on the Wikipedia:


There used to be restrictions on a hostname.
These had to start with and end with a letter or number, and have only letters, numbers, or a dash. (I heard that originally hostnames had to start with a letter, but 3M got that changed. This might be an urban legend.)
That’s a common restriction for a name still.
Things get funky when you want non-ASCII names - like if you want a cyrillic or Greek name - as registries often limit the allowed characters to limit “isomorphic attacks”. That’s where you use symbols that look the same to trick people into thinking they’re going to another site, like using a 0 instead of an O, or a l instead of an I.
None of this will apply to the XYZ domains that give you a number.
One other issue that might impact you is if you try to connect using only a numeric name. Some tools will interpret such a name as an IPv4 address. Easily solved by using the full name, but weird and confusing if it happens to you unexpectedly. 😅


Seems like someone already did this:
https://github.com/netdata/netdata/issues/20565
Maybe upgrading will fix it?


Self reply as a follow up.
I use nom.es for DNS experimentation. These are like $3 a year or so, and work fine.
I miss DotTK, which was dodgy and didn’t support DNSSEC, but was actually free. 😅


I would not expect any issues.
From the point of view of DNS, a name is a name.
You can never tell what weird restrictions any given software is going to place on you (there were a lot of forms that did not like TLD with more than 4 characters, 20 years ago or so). But it’s only $1, so worth experimenting, IMHO.
Please let us know if there are problems!
I am never sure since I am American so know lots of Spanish from osmosis. But of course in any large European city there will be plenty of people who know enough English to help out. So yeah, he probably approached every interaction with stereotypical British arrogance and annoyed the people who would have been happy to help him otherwise. 🙈
My parents’ house had such a room! I always thought it was weird to dedicate a room as a shrine to some mythical guest who would someday come and honor it with their presence.
I believe it.
I worked with an Englishman who has lived in the Netherlands for more than 20 years without learning Dutch.
We had a work trip to Madrid, and he went the weekend beforehand for a short vacation. I ran into him on Sunday night and asked him how it went. He said it was terrible, because he’s a vegetarian and couldn’t eat anything because nobody spoke English. He didn’t know what to order or how to ask if something was vegetarian. He was outraged that nobody spoke English. In Madrid. The capital of Spain. 🙈


You can ship any characters though, right? It’s not only gay…


Isn’t he British?
If they had a constitution, it would require all subjects citizens complain, while muttering, “mustn’t grumble”.


All I do:
I think that’s it. I have my host exposed to the Internet. As far as I know, it’s fine.
BTW, sshguard is for the IMAP and SMTP that run on the host, which do allow password logins. But it helps reduce load from brute force attacks on port 22 (which are pointless anyway).
I’m much more worried about my son installing dodgy Minecraft mods, or my wife installing another app that she saw on TikTok. I really should put them each on a separate VLAN…


The 17th Amendement requires the direct election of Senators. Blue state accept red states’ votes for those.
If you’re going to make an argument based on bad faith of states, then the US basically ceases to exist as a republic, regardless of whether you have the compact.


I think maybe you misunderstood the compact.
I’m your example, the states who signed the compact would all put their votes to candidate Y, assuming they had more popular votes in all states.
It’s not “join us or be punished”, it’s “we will implement the will of the majority, not matter what”.


Supreme Court: “Not like that.”


Nobody gets disenfranchised. Rather this compact enables the radical idea of “one person, one vote”.


It’s not completely pseudo-science, as there are a lot of correlations with things like academic success or job performance:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligence_quotient#Social_correlations


Political revolutions usually involve a wealthy class being kept away from political power, combined with a particularly unpopular and stupid absolute ruler.
In the US, the wealthy are the political class, and while Trump is stupid and unpopular he has only been in power a year. Most people think he will be gone in 3 more years, and even if he jettisons the Constitution and stays in as President, he is old and unhealthy.
Kubernetes storage is the reason I was looking at Minio in the past.