Our point was that it doesn’t need to involve app developers at all, it should just be handled by the OS automatically.
It doesn’t hurt to look over the fence and see what works.
Our point was that it doesn’t need to involve app developers at all, it should just be handled by the OS automatically.
It doesn’t hurt to look over the fence and see what works.
In fairness, One Nation voters can’t read, so we can’t expect them to understand anything. And 60% is still a majority. But doesn’t feel good being down with UAE and Nigeria :(
Never heard that term, but its a very obscure concept, so wouldn’t surprise me if it had multiple names. Probably vender specific names?
Seems quite a few people havent heard of it, hence a lot of the split DNS answers :/
On android the app ID is used for password matching, does apple really not do the same thing? That would be maddening!
I can’t remember exactly what its called, but something like router NAT loopback is what you want. I’ll have a look around. But if you set it right, things should work properly. It might be a router setting.
Found it: https://community.tp-link.com/en/home/stories/detail/1726
I am also Aussie, but I’ve been buying from Aliexpress of late. Maybe should try some Mirabella bulbs again, last time I bought them it was after the first OTA exploit was fixed, but before cloudcutter. Had to slice open the bulbs and flash via serial.
Are you just getting stuff from Costco?
Have they updated it for new stuff? Last time I tried it cloudcutter was patched in new stuff :(
I saw a 1.5hr video published a few hours ago, dunno if it got removed. Description did say it would be edited and reuploaded.
4 cores is a bit limiting, but definitely depends on the usage. I only have 1 VM on my NUC, everything else is docker.
I thought all the core processors had VT* extensions, I was using virtualization on my first gen i7. They are very old an inefficient now though.
Are you from Tuya? They seem hellbent on locking their stuff down to the cloud.
Perhaps point out to your management that IOT is an enthusiast driven market. If you appease the enthusiasts, they will recommend your products to their less technically inclined friends.
Enthusiasts want both: a good initial software ecosystem, and the option to break out of that if required. If your company can offer that, even if it involves voiding the warrenty, we’ll buy and recommend their stuff.
In the case of Tuya, their stuff was historically super easy to open, solder some jumpers and flash (or exploit the OTA to flash). I bought loads of their power boards and lights. In some ways I was an ideal consumer, I bought their stuff, voided the warrenty immediately (so no support calls), and never used their cloud, so didn’t waste their resources. Now they are making it near impossible, and I won’t touch their stuff.
All that said, good luck, your gonna need it.
I5 3470 is old, but its not that bad. Lots of people are homelabing on NUCs which are only very slightly faster. Performance per Watt will be terrible though. (I am on an i7-10710u, and I’ve yet to run out of steam so far - https://cpu.userbenchmark.com/Compare/Intel-Core-i7-10710U-vs-Intel-Core-i5-3470/m900004vs2771 )
It has VTx/VTd, so should be okay for proxmox, what makes you think it won’t work well?
There will be a lot of work to understand the implications of these novel metals in the stratosphere,” Murphy said
I don’t see anything in that article about them being “alarmed”.
So far all the scientists appear to be saying “heads up, we need to investigate this further”, not “stop launching, this is bad”. We should listen to the scientists.
How about we wait until the science is actually in before kneejerking around? We have had the science equivalent of a shower thought, actual work and analysis needs to be done before jumping to conclusions.
Any rightups on this? A remote WiFi takeover like this is crazy, especially if it affects all drivers and devices.
At 8tb, I can’t find any, but here is a 5tb disk:
https://www.amazon.com.au/Seagate-Barracuda-Internal-Drive-Factor/dp/B01LXO31IZ/ref=mp_s_a_1_13
Check the thickness though, your device may not accept 15mm disks.
The OPs device can take a nvme SSD and an internal HDD. Unclear if the current SSD is nvme or not though, but I assumed it was nvme.
A gpg key has to be stored on something, and that can be stolen or lost. (Or degraded over time).
You are essentially pushing for 1 factor authentication. Its a strong factor, but still just 1.
The USB connection will likely be quite slow, and some external harddisks will power save aggressively.
You could get a largish 2.5" HDD and hook it up internally, might be a middle ground cost-wise?
Windows can have the same problem when you run out of space, but it will at least give you a helpful UI to clean everything up.
Its not clear to me either why it appeared as if there was free space, but it might be the btrfs
/df
incompatibility the other poster raised.
Good luck, and reach out if there are further issues :)
Because English is half a dozen languages wrapped in a trenchcoat? A lot of the law related words are from French derivations AFAIK?
Domain specific language is found across all realms of society, even firefighters have words or phrases with a specific meaning (back-burning, pumper, appliance, etc). So maybe its not that some areas are lazy, its just that you haven’t been exposed to their more technical side?