The Wiert Corner – irregular stream of stuff

Jeroen W. Pluimers on .NET, C#, Delphi, databases, and personal interests

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Supporting Young People After a Distressing Event (Alys Cole-King, Dom Thompson, Jess Read, Mike Armiger, Knut Schroeder, Tom Cole-King, Andrea Walraven-Thissen)

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/10/18

Important evidence-informed ‘quick read’ guide: [Wayback] Supporting Young People After a Distressing Event.

Via [WaybackSave/Archive] Dr Alys Cole-King on X: “Important advice to support young people after a distressing event. Please read and share our evidence-informed ‘quick read’ guide Thanks @Walrathis @drdomthompson @MikeArmiger @jk__read We sincerely hope this will help. Thoughts and prayers with everyone affected #Southport” which initially only had a screenshot (see below the signature) but later had a co-author provide a link to the PDF.

Without downloading the PDF document, you can view it on-line here: [Wayback PDF View/PDF View].

Link to the PDF view via this thread:

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Posted in Awareness, Health, LifeHacker, Power User | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

How can I enable the Windows Task Scheduler History recording? (via Stack Overflow)

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/10/18

For my link archive, as apparently the history recording for the Windows (not just server) Task Scheduler is disabled [Wayback How can I enable the Windows Server Task Scheduler History recording? – Stack Overflow

  1. Open an elevated Task Scheduler (ie. right-click on the Task Scheduler icon and choose Run as administrator)
  2. In the Actions pane (right pane, not the actions tab), click Enable All Tasks History
That’s it. Not sure why this isn’t on by default, but it isn’t.

At the time of writing, I did not have energy to figure out which steps on the console to take to enable this history.

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Posted in Power User, Windows, Windows 10, Windows 11, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1 | Leave a Comment »

AI generates covertly racist decisions about people based on their dialect | Nature

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/10/17

LLM are just statistic text generators which depend on the texts they have been trained which and alleviating this usually makes things worse: [Wayback/Archive] AI generates covertly racist decisions about people based on their dialect | Nature

Related:

Of course these issues are not limited to natural language LLM: artificial computer language LLM are also full of training issues that are likely very hard to resolve. What if covert organisations succeed poisoning LLM platforms with malicious code?

Via

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Posted in AI and ML; Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning, Conference Topics, Conferences, Development, Event, LLM, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Kris on Twitter: “On a scale of 1-8, how pessimistic is your code?”

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/10/17

Interesting series of tweets about what to harden your application for in a reply to [Wayback/Archive] Kris on Twitter: “On a scale of 1-8, how pessimistic is your code? “Write code to provision a Google Chrome Extension for an end users Mac.”” which I saved to [Wayback/Archive] Thread by @isotopp on Thread Reader App (actually the scale is 1-9):

Extensions are stored in a 32 letter directory in the user profile in the Extensions directory.

i.e.

/Users/kris/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Extensions/<32letters>

  1. The User has set up their Mac so that their home directory is not in /Users.
  2. The User has set up their Mac so that the home directory name is different from their login user name.
  3. The User has multiple user profiles in Chrome, so that the path is not $HOME/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default, but some other profile directory.
  4. The target profile is not “Default“.
  5. The target name is not a directory, but a symlink to some interesting system config file or directory instead.
  6. The target name already exists, and is a file, not a directory.
  7. The target name is a file, and has permissions set to 000 (chmod a-rwx).
  8. The file has an ACL that denies deletion to the user.
    $ chmod +a "$USER deny delete" <32chars>
  9. The file has been chflags‘ed to schg (immutable; irrevocable, unless the machine is rebooted to single user mode).

The above idea was for Chrome Extensions, so the below links are relevant, but it could be extended to any installer use case.

–jeroen

Posted in Development, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Five Geek Social Fallacies – Plausibly Deniable

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/10/16

So relatable: [Wayback/Archive] Five Geek Social Fallacies – Plausibly Deniable

Via: [Wayback/Archive] Ian Coldwater 📦💥 on X: “It has come to my attention that there are younger folks who haven’t heard of Five Geek Social Fallacies. It was written in 2003 and the social dynamics stay real. Once you read it, you’ll see them everywhere.”

--jeroen

Posted in Awareness, Conference Topics, Conferences, Development, Event, Geeky, Inclusion / inclusive society | Leave a Comment »

Need to check out the Windows AutoLogonSID registry value and other autologon security features in Windows

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/10/16

On my list of things to look at via [Wayback/Archive] “AutoLogonSID” – Google Search:

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Posted in Conference Topics, Conferences, Development, Event, Power User, Security, Software Development, Windows, Windows 10, Windows 11, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows Development | Leave a Comment »

Accessibility Myths – debunked

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/10/15

[Wayback/Archive] Accessibility Myths has great debunks.

Quite a few of them are phrased with a web perspective in mind. That’s just because of prevalence. These myths are there on native platforms (mobile, Windows, MacOS and Linux) as well and can be debunked in the same way.

Similar myths are even there for real life: accessibility of buildings, signage, streets, you name it are just that and can be debunked with common sense.

An inclusive society actually is cheaper than a exclusive one, as it benefits everyone. The same holds for your software.

Related: [Wayback/Archive] Learn Accessibility  |  web.dev

Via:

  1. [Wayback/Archive] Accessibility Awareness on X: “When you make the pitch for accessibility, be prepared for pushback. There are several myths and misconceptions, so it’s good to be aware of what they are and how to dispel them.”
  2. [Wayback/Archive] Accessibility Awareness on X: “”Learn Accessibility” is a course that takes you through the essentials for building accessible websites and web apps. Created for both beginners and advanced users, this course can be taken beginning to end, or used as a reference for specific topics.”

--jeroen

Posted in accessibility (a11y), Awareness, Development, Hardware Development, Inclusion / inclusive society, Power User, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Some winget packages that will get you x86 or x64 versions of vcredist140

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/10/15

A while ago I downloaded some internal tooling that required vcredist140.dll (and related DLLs).

From the name you cannot see if that is a 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) dependency so you often have to trial and error to figure out which one you need.

I adopted some winget package install command-lines with package IDs current at the time of writing this blog post; similar should be available at the time of publication:

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Posted in .NET, C++, Development, Software Development, Visual Studio 2015, Visual Studio 2017, Visual Studio 2019, Visual Studio 2022, Visual Studio and tools, Visual Studio C++ | Leave a Comment »

GitHub – oetiker/znapzend: zfs backup with remote capabilities and mbuffer integration.

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/10/14

I will likely need this one day: [Wayback/Archive] GitHub – oetiker/znapzend: zfs backup with remote capabilities and mbuffer integration.

Web-site: [Wayback/Archive] ZnapZend – open source ZFS backup with mbuffer and ssh support

--jeroen

Posted in *nix, *nix-tools, Power User, ZFS | Leave a Comment »

Windows 10/11: how to check if Hibernation is enabled or disabled

Posted by jpluimers on 2024/10/14

A long time ago I wrote about How To Fix Missing Hibernation Option On Windows 10.

Back then I needed to enable it (using powercfg.exe /hibernate on or disable using powercfg.exe /hibernate off), but I forgot about how to query this setting.

[Wayback/Archive] windows check if hibernation is enabled – Google Search gives me a result which is somewhat workable, but hopefully some day I find a better solution than in [Wayback/Archive] How to see from commandline (!!!) if hibernation is on or off? – Windows 10 Forums:

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Posted in Power User, Windows, Windows 10, Windows 11 | Leave a Comment »