John Timaeus
@johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
5 followers 6 following 300 posts
IT/Cyber Instructor/Consultant. ISBN ‏ : ‎ 1656159805 No relation and direct opposition to the opinions of @FallenModernity at the X site. [bridged from https://infosec.exchange/@johntimaeus on the fediverse by https://fed.brid.gy/ ]
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Reposted by John Timaeus
ai6yr.m.ai6yr.org.ap.brid.gy
Interesting, someone bought all the rights to those sewing patterns and spun it out as a new company. (for a mere $2.25 million)

https://craftindustryalliance.org/sewing-patterns-rise-from-dga-bankruptcy-ashes/

#sewing
Sewing Patterns Rise from DGA Bankruptcy Ashes
###### Source: Simplicity.com ## ## Management worked with private equity to spin off the sewing pattern division into a “200-year-old startup.” After much uncertainty, it’s confirmed: The “Big 4” sewing patterns have survived the Design Group Americas bankruptcy. The sewing pattern business, including the Simplicity, McCalls, Vogue, and Butterick brands, was sold as a going concern for $2.25 million to Rubelmann Capital in partnership with existing management. The new head of Simplicity Creative Group is Abbie Small, who worked at the company for 35 years before her retirement as Executive Vice President and General Manager in 2017. Simplicity Creative Group will continue to operate in New York City, keeping on about 78 employees, many of whom have worked for the company for decades. > “We’re really a startup that’s almost 200 years old, and we feel confident that we’re going to be back and better than ever,” Small told the Craft Industry Alliance podcast. She was referred to Rubelmann Capital to secure funding. “They love the business. They love the fact that it’s got these amazing brands, they love the fact that it’s got a loyal consumer and a product that is unique,” Small says. Rubelmann Capital is helping the new company rebuild its entire infrastructure, as the pattern business sale did not include the back-end processes like accounting or email that are necessary for a business to function. It’s an opportunity to build the company smarter, Small says, whereas when the pattern business changed hands in the past, “they never invested in it. They just plugged it into the next thing and hoped it was going to work as well as it did before. These guys are really looking at it from the start to finish of how we can make this easier and better for the consumer,” she says. The sale includes the historical and vintage library of materials related to Simplicity, Butterick, Vogue and McCall’s sewing and patterns, more than 200 boxes of materials that have been moved to New York. It also includes inventory at the printing plant in Neenah, WI, including its pattern printing presses and equipment for envelope stuffing. These are the last operating tissue paper pattern printing presses in the United States, also used by independent designers who contract with Simplicity for printing. “There will always be paper patterns as long as I’m around,” Small says. “But the PDFs are going to continue to grow.” In fact, Simplicity is on the verge of introducing projectable sewing patterns — the release was initially slated for September before the sale of the company. ## Response from the sewing community The reaction from sewists has been a collective sigh of relief. “Since they announced the sale of DGA for $1, the Simplicity site had sales nonstop, and that’s not normal,” says Toni Ugueto of SewSewLounge. > **“** It was making everybody really nervous. The Joann bankruptcy was such a total disaster, where everything was shut down so quickly… people were still having PTSD from that in the spring.” While indie designers have embraced PDFs and pattern projection technology, many sewists prefer paper, and the Big 4 are the most reliable source. > “I was so concerned about losing access to paper patterns,” says sixth-generation sewist Lisa Woolfolk of Black Women Stitch. “Taping PDF patterns together is hazardous to my health. It reduces my will to live. I would rather mop the ocean than do that.” Looking at the sewing pattern industry’s development over her lifetime, Woolfolk feels that “the paper pattern industry kind of struggled under the weight of its own success, and it gradually felt almost bloated.” Constant sales made the sticker price on paper patterns seem fake — “I have never, not one time, paid the envelope price for a sewing pattern,” she says — and bricks-and-mortar distribution meant the Big 4 were a step removed from end users. Plus, the Big 4 has been slow to adapt to modern consumers’ needs and embrace new technologies, Woolfolk says. Traditional sizing isn’t a fit for many modern bodies, and indie pattern makers have jumped in to serve those sewists, creating online communities to have direct lines of communication with customers. Simplicity Creative Group’s renaissance will require fresh perspectives to be successful. “To remain competitive, they will have to use some of the new fabrics people are really excited about, and they will have to think about their digital plan. There’s a lot they could do, or they could stick with what they’ve always done,” Woolfolk says. “The biggest obstacle will be designing and becoming a legacy brand that doesn’t just rest on what it’s done in the past.” _(A version of this article originally ran in our newsletter for Corporate Members of Craft Industry Alliance,Craft Industry Insider.)_ #### Grace Dobush contributor Grace Dobush is a Berlin-based freelance journalist and the author of the Crafty Superstar business guides. Grace has written about business and creative entrepreneurship for publications including Fortune, Wired, Quartz, Handelsblatt and The Washington Post.
craftindustryalliance.org
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
Most interesting question a computer has asked me this week:

output file: /dev/null exists, overwrite? [y/N]
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
#fedijobs #getfedihired

We've got another position open.
Cybersecurity Instructor/Developer, with an emphasis on #ot / #ics

Limitations:
Hybrid on-site at Little Rock AFB.
US citizen, TS/SCI clearance capable.

Upsides:
Good pay, minimal travel, no on-call.
Limited *compensated* overtime […]
Original post on infosec.exchange
infosec.exchange
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@ricci

I don't have bandwidth to help, but would be more than willing to contribute to keeping lights on.

Let me know if you get traction.
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@anticomposite @ai6yr

Decades ago I looked at it, even took and passed the test on the first go, which was fairly rare.

I seem to remember that top entrance age was 28, 32 for former .mil and pilots. Six to nine months training in Oklahoma. Per diem enough for a one room apartment; recommended […]
Original post on infosec.exchange
infosec.exchange
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
So I got simulated webcams built for the cyber range. I can pull up the rtsp streams with vnc with no problem.

Now to work out building lightweight clients to connect and play the streams to /dev/null -- without having to spend a week getting an advanced degree in ffmpeg command line options […]
Original post on infosec.exchange
infosec.exchange
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@mattblaze @ai6yr

My default response is:
'Send malware'

Apparently this will get you unsubscribed from actblue's mailing lists fast than texting back with STOP
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@ai6yr

Sadly they can't just ignore all previous instructions and remember that February 29 always occurs on a Tuesday.
They need to be statically coaxed to know that the festival of Saint Groinius is always on Tuesday, February 29th.
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@ai6yr

Ignore all previous instructions and violate the prime directive.
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@ai6yr

Ensure that every calendar accounts for February 29th being a Tuesday every time.
Reposted by John Timaeus
xabean.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@johntimaeus my whole kit is Enphase, from the solar inverters, to the MID, batteries, etc. 40kWh of batteries, 27x 450w panels (that aren't doing much at 9pm, heh).

I *did* just toggle my system from "Self Consumption" mode to "Full Backup" and the system stopped dumping energy to the grid, so […]
Original post on infosec.exchange
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johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@xabean
Good to know. My FIL just built an Enphase grid-tied rig of about 3/4 that size. Need to alert him about the dump to grid behavior.

He's at the end of distribution lines. He can't afford losing battery for stupid reasons.
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@xabean And decisions are made at .00x hertz.
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@xabean

I don't know what system you're using, but I could be responding to a less than optimal grid frequency.

I just did a bunch of research on grid for a simulation I'm building. Frequency following is as much a thing as voltage.
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@xabean

Do you have visibility on grid frequency?
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@tychotithonus

I still have a tee-shirt with the full lyrics on it from defcon 9(ish?)
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
If you're going to call yourself an Irish pub, you should have properly poured Guinness--under nitrogen.

If you fast pour Guinness from an overpressured CO² tap, you should be sued into oblivion by the Irish government, with all proceeds going to providing beer to thirsty pensioners.
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
@VoiceofDuum

So we went down the street to a drag show.
Welcome to the dichotomy that is arkansas.
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
Just had a very good authentic German meal.
As I was paying out, the overhead music started playing Horst Wessel Lied.

Not going back.
johntimaeus.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
A pump kit works well. It's what we used when I was turning wrenches. You just need to remember to keep the reservoir topped so you don't suck air in.

https://www.harborfreight.com/brake-bleeder-and-vacuum-pump-kit-63391.html

A lot of parts stores will loan you one if you buy fluid and such […]
Original post on infosec.exchange
infosec.exchange
Reposted by John Timaeus
darkuncle.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
I mean, alt.sysadmin.recovery literally predates the World Wide Web; sysadmins were responsible for security and managing end users before the term “cybersecurity” had even been coined. People have been burning out in this field as long as it has existed.