Agreed. I would also reconsider ditching the ISP router. You can still connect your gateway to it, and having the ISP device on premises can mean they might not blame your equipment for a line issue.
Agreed. I would also reconsider ditching the ISP router. You can still connect your gateway to it, and having the ISP device on premises can mean they might not blame your equipment for a line issue.
Who could have possibly seen this coming?
You can automate the same way with torrents, can’t you? I mean, you can even use indexers of both types at the same time.
We already do, with our time, irritation and reduced functionality.
“I’m not touching youuuu” “Moooooom!”
And the nazis will hopefully leave to go there as well
What if the rich are a blight that create poverty by sucking up the capital?
I guess that’s what Total Victory means
As disappointingly non-standard as USB-C products have proven to be, at least they are much better than this.
Edit: Just happened upon this illustrative paragraph on pcmag.com
The cable is the final obstacle. Thunderbolt 3 and 4 cables are always good for up to 100 watts, but for USB-C docks, a special USB-C cable is required for more than 60 watts. To make things easier, you’ll want to be sure that the dock bundles a compatible charging cable, and if not, you’ll want to shop for a USB-C charging-specific cable capable of handling the wattage you need. Important note: Not all third-party USB-C charging cables rated for up to 100 watts support USB 3 speeds! Many (indeed, plenty) are USB 2.0-capable only. For example, the Apple USB-C Charge Cable (1 m) only supports up to 60 watts, while the Apple USB-C Charge Cable (2 m) supports up to 100 watts. Shop carefully.
// narrator: the reason was management
Also needs mentioning: clustering. I have a years old cluster with none of the hardware I originally started with, but my Pi-hole is still there. Having the ability to migrate guests between hosts is a game changer when you frequently replace or rebuild said hosts. With the right setup, migration can have as little as a few seconds of downtime, or even no downtime at all. You can’t do that with bare metal installs.
I don’t know how Joy gets such quality from small files, but damn.
There’s dozens of us! But seriously, i2p has a future for this
The anti-competitive behaviour implied in a walled-garden starts once that flagship product is bought.
Can a container output video to a display? I have a container I remote into with GNOME on it, but would like to log into a console if possible.
Doesn’t give you any security? Please elaborate.
Indeed, it’s worth explicitly checking every drive you buy if you are using it in a NAS.
SMR is a relatively new disk format technology that makes drives cheaper but writes slower, which can be noticeably bad in a NAS, especially if you are using a write-intensive RAID type. Most disk manufacturers will have drives meant for NAS like WD Red or Seagate Ironwolf, and they are almost all CMR and not SMR.
I understand the attraction of virtualising this, but unless you want to share more than just the ISP connection, I would be providing Internet access to your neighbour’s untrusted network using a bare-metal router. Just my two cents.
Slam, slam, slam, slam, eggs, beans and slam.