I’m writing a Lemmy comment, not my thesis. Sorry my casual and lazy word choice upset you for not being grammatically correct.
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As someone who’s worked for several years in higher ed IT and used Linux during my studies, this’ll only get you most of the way there. Unfortunately some proctoring software (Respondus Lockdown Browser comes to mind) can be incredibly invasive, and to my knowledge will refuses to run in a VM.
Instructors also have a tendency of not disclosing during registration whether or not they use these proctoring softwares.
I’m lucky enough that by the time I was all-in on Linux, I wasn’t taking courses that used that exam model, but it’s why I make sure that the helpdesk at my current institution offers loaner devices to students who either have computers incapable of running the proctoring software, or who simply don’t want that kind of software on their own machine. It’s a pain in the ass to work with, but apparently it’s enshrined in our faculty’s union contract.
pogmommy@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.world•Hyundai car requires $2000, app & internet access to fix your brakes - what the actual fEnglish
111·14 days agoAh my bad, despite having been coerced into a transportation economy that forces us to purchase multi-thousand dollar machines, I forgot to consider if we’re asking too much of automotive manufacturers when we request to not pay a premium for comfort that literally costs them nothing since they already sold it to us.
pogmommy@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.world•Hyundai car requires $2000, app & internet access to fix your brakes - what the actual fEnglish
121·14 days agoThis is such a weird hill to die on for someone who claims to be pro-consumer
pogmommy@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•swww renamed to awww, due to the author's guilt from obliviously naming it "final solution"English
1·28 days agoRan it through chatgpt, all it told me to sleep with a AA battery under my tongue
pogmommy@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Finally, after some time I made the switch to #Linux !English
7·1 month agoYou’re looking for fastfetch: https://github.com/fastfetch-cli/fastfetch
That in no way mean we ought to reward people who actively foster it
No, also why would we excuse it if it were?
pogmommy@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.world•4chan fined $26K for refusing to assess risks under UK Online Safety ActEnglish
10·2 months agoMy server is in the corned of my bedroom. How the hell can I be operating in China, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Brazil, Norway, or The UK if my bedroom is in none of those countries?
pogmommy@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.world•Firefox is adding profiles to separate your browsing sessionsEnglish
52·2 months agoImpressive that theyre finally adding a feature that ive already been using. Makes you wonder how they do that
pogmommy@lemmy.mlto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Logitech will brick its $100 Pop smart home buttons on October 15 - Ars TechnicaEnglish
21·2 months agoBasic online safety to you and me can be a bit high-level for many, disproportionately so for those who are going to remain on Windows 10. I don’t like Windows, either 10 or 11, but most of the hardware losing support with 10’s EOL can run a secure and modern operating system just fine, and Windows 11 could have been that if not for the overhead of Microsoft’s telemetry and other bloat. Home users lacking computer proficiency are being thrown under the bus so that Microsoft can generate metric tons of ewaste as they force their enterprise customers to purchase new hardware. With fresh new license keys.
pogmommy@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.world•Deloitte will refund Australian government for AI hallucination-filled reportEnglish
7·2 months agoYou’re not wrong but I think the takeaway is to hold both groups responsible
Eh they said that about desktop Linux not that long ago
pogmommy@lemmy.mlto
homeassistant@lemmy.world•Whats everyone using for smart plugs?English
3·2 months agoCheck out python-kasa. Pretty sure I’ve only used the proprietary app to set up the first one because I learned about this. The rest I could do on my computer from the command line.
pogmommy@lemmy.mlto
homeassistant@lemmy.world•Whats everyone using for smart plugs?English
1·2 months agoI happened across a shit ton of kasa smart plugs, and don’t need the range/mesh that ZigBee provides, so ive just been using them. Been working well, they can be configured locally and can be blocked from internet access by my router
That’d be like asking a a kid to stop selling lemonade so he can focus on making a sign out of something other than cardboard
pogmommy@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Linux phones are more important now than everEnglish
21·3 months agoAbout as much as the burger I ate yesterday still was one this morning
pogmommy@lemmy.mlto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Linux phones are more important now than everEnglish
6·3 months agoDonation page link for those who’d also like to send some cash their way: https://opencollective.com/postmarketos
The only time I care enough about higher than 1080p displays is on my computer monitors so I can multitask on one display without UI elements getting mangled. If I’m playing a game or watching a video, I really can’t tell between 1080 and 4k

I’ve heard of some methods to bypass it, but unfortunately to test them I’d need to run a real proctored exam, or have our academic technology group set up a “pentesting” one that I can abuse for this software we pay for a license to. Assuming that didn’t land us on Respondus’ bad side and jeapordize our license, it would at best be a waste of time and resources since we couldn’t guarantee students that it wouldn’t get patched or flag them for cheating in the future. The obvious answer is for us as an institution to use better software (or adopt better assessment methods) but software this invasive by nature is generally not going to be open to running on platforms like Linux. And use of proctoring software is unfortunately enshrined in our faculty’s contracts.
And yeah, on the individual level, students themselves can’t really toy with getting it to run in a VM without risking failing an exam. Shit sucks.