I use the default WebUI in a browser.
I prefer landscape mode, haven’t found any suitable apps for that.
I like computers, trains, space, radio-related everything and a bunch of other tech related stuff. User of GNU+Linux.
I am also dumb and worthless.
My laptop is HP 255 G7 running Manjaro and Linux Mint.
I own RTL-SDRv3 and RSP1 clone.
SDF Unix shell username: user224
I use the default WebUI in a browser.
I prefer landscape mode, haven’t found any suitable apps for that.
How long has it been? It’s just a 502, happens sometimes.
Check Sweet Home 3D for visualizations. Though it’s probably not what you’re looking for.
Nah, stick to VPNs. Don’t overload Tor with pirate media. Tor network isn’t meant for large data transfers like that.
I was referring to Hanbrake which is mentioned in the post.
Mmmm, perfectly level.
Is it not in your distro’s repo? I am pretty sure I’ve used handbrake from Arch repo just fine.
Just be quick, or you may not have enough money.
Possibly not just painful.
High pressure injection injuries are not nice.
I also have X3 Pro, but on outdated stock ROM (Android 11 MIUI 12). Which custom ROM are you running?
Normal? What is normal in the first place?
It is generally expected to stop once you hit puberty, and since that point there’s a general expectation that sleeping (literal meaning of the word) with someone else will be reserved to your partner.
But why though? It’s not like people have need for physical contact just until they hit puberty, and obviously not all physical contact is sexual. It’s not weird to hug, and it’s also not like it has a time limit.
Take this for example. Anything sexual between siblings is unnatural and not normal. Anything sexual between humans and animals is unnatural and not normal as well. But it is generally viewed as normal to sleep with your dog or a cat. What’s the difference? Why is such contact between different species normal, yet when it’s with the same specie, we arrive at this question.
I guess it depends on what is “normal”.
Yes, but at much higher cost.
Because the post was removed. But the reason is right there:
Edit: Nevermind, you should still be able to see your own posts if you are logged in.
By the way, with some not so ancient devices you can search for the firmware here: https://software.cisco.com/download/home and at least get MD5 and SHA-512 hashes to verify the files you downloaded.
Not the case with this AP though.
Edit: Oh, I almost forgot. Also the exact filename. Makes it easy finding it online.
attack
They just pull out of those states. How is that an attack?
Well, it works on my machine.
Good idea.
You can still get the newest DD-WRT builds even on the WRT54G.
That is a Wi-Fi router from 2002.
Of course, the features are sort of limited. I tried the VPN build (on WRT54GL), but I couldn’t get the OpenVPN client to connect. I found some thread mentioning it may be missing something, but I don’t know if that’s the issue.
Anyway, without overclocking I’d expect like 2Mbps. I mean, it barely handles HTTPS. Just trying to load the WebUI maxes out the CPU for several seconds if trying to use HTTPS.
Perhaps it’s not missing anything software-wise, but it’s just so slow it times out during handshake.
So I just put the std build on it in case it will be useful at some point.
My lazy way is NGINX with autoindex.
If it’s to go over untrusted network (e.g.: internet, school network) I use SSH for port forwarding. Lazy encryption.
Something like this works just fine:
worker_processes 1;
daemon off;
events {
}
http {
default_type application/octet-stream;
server {
root /storage/emulated/0/sharedfile;
listen 127.0.0.1:30000;
location / {
autoindex on;
}
}
}
sharedfile is a directory with the files.
On remote machine if I am not mistaken
ssh -L 127.0.0.1:8080:127.0.0.1:30000 username@host
Then just access it in web browser on 127.0.0.1:8080 or whatever port you chose.
In PuTTY you can find this under “Tunnels”.
Of course, you need to have SSH server set up as well.
Why do you need to post more?
Generally it just means spamming, better to restrict it.
Still works for me.