Spyke

Was about 3pm here /cries in Australian

We regularly get screwed over during business hours by things being pushed out overnight in the US/UK

14

AFAIK it was a Thursday night push for people in US mountain time / pacific time. But, that ends up being Friday early morning in Europe and Friday mid-day in Asia.

7
lemmy.sdf.org

Y2K would have been CRTs. But it's not like kids will know that.

62
cannedtunareply
lemmy.world

Hey we had flat screens back then, they just took up the whole floor space and it took 2 people to move those projection TVs

47
vaionkoreply
sopuli.xyz

Laptops also had LCDs. Just don't move your mouse too fast or the screen can't keep up and it'll disappear

10
lemm.ee

You're thinking of passive matrix displays. Those were the cheaper option but active matrix screens did exist.

2

They did, but you had to pay a pretty penny to have one of those

2
lemm.ee

As someone stuck in DTW, I feel the pain.

27
T4V0reply
lemmy.pt

Bro do you even lingo? It's obviously Down To Wedgie, that's why he's in pain

20
lemmy.world

No, no, no. It's clearly a city since the photo is flight info boards. Clearly he means Dallas Tort Worth, it's a little tiny place unlike its bigger brother DFW.

9

Surprised to hear someone mention Dallas Tort Worth ever since The Incident.

4

Of course mate, and unlike its sibling, it Doesn't Fuck Walruses

3
lemmy.ml

Should have not trusted a third party to install proprietary code into the kernel. It's not a Windows issue directly, they have a Linux version too, but anything that allows third parties to put proprietary code into your kernel and automatically update it without your approval is untrustworthy.

54
Damagereply
slrpnk.net

They have a Linux version, but this happened only to the Windows one... Coincidence?!

5
qjkxbmwvzreply
startrek.website

Probably coincidence? It sounds (???) like this is a pretty simple fix on Windows.

The number of times I have borked my Linux machines so they wouldn't boot is, well, greater than zero for sure. Any operating system can be bricked to the point of requiring manual intervention by software with elevated privileges.

16
feddit.org

The cause is a malfunction of the Crowdstrike monitoring solution, which employees use to spy at anything ever done on company hardware. They do have a Linux version and it has been reported to cause kernel panics (not sure if during this incident).

But yes, Windows on public information displays is dumb.

25

it was because crowdstrike themselves notified that this specific instance did not affect their linux nor osx distributions of security, and was windows specific.

12

This in particular is a Crowdstrike issue. They suck as much as windows. Crowdstrike has had issues on Linux before:

Crowdstrike - freezing RockyLinux After 9.4 upgrade:: https://forums.rockylinux.org/t/crowdstrike-freezing-rockylinux-after-9-4-upgrade/14041

Kernel panic observed after booting 5.14.0-427.13.1.el9_4.x86_64 by falcon-sensor process:
https://access.redhat.com/solutions/7068083

Debian user experience: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41005936

Another windows story: https://www.thestack.technology/crowdstrike-bug-maxes-out-100-of-cpu-requires-windows-reboots/

8
lemmy.world

How was this not tested by Microsoft in a virtual environment with a large set of test conditions before it was released? Does this not happen?

-1
teknomunkreply
lemm.ee

I don't expect that Microsoft checks CrowdStrike's software before CrowdStrike pushes their updates.

44
Johnny5reply
lemm.ee

Everyone has a test environment but only a few separate prod

8

You reached the end