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There’s also the longer form Drachinifel version
There’s also the longer form Drachinifel version
Theoretically cryptocurrencies are interesting, but Bitcoin just isn’t usable.
Bitcoin and many other currencies have way too many and large fluctuations in value for daily use.
Bitcoin specifically is not practical for transactions in general due to cost and block size limits. Yes, lightning exists, but maybe your technology is shit if it needs a second overlay network to function.
Instead of fixing those issues, most other coins are just pump and dump schemes for a quick buck.
Only very few coins try to do something different and fix some of these issues.
Yggdrasil :)
Open UDP ports are pretty secure and rarely found by scanners. The basic issue with scanning for UDP is, that most services don’t respond to random garbage you try to probe then with. Without getting a response back, the scanner has no way of knowing if there is something running on that port or not.
Wireguard in particular only responds if the correct key is given.
Also make sure your firewall DROPs (usually the default, but do check) disallowed connections instead of REJECT. This way any UDP probing, whether it’s to an open port or closed one just times out with no way for the scanner to distinguish them.
ISPs were already required to block the sites. I don’t think an additional block on the Cisco side would change anything in that case.
Apparently Cisco operates a popular DNS resolver? Never heard of that before.
And definitely don’t learn how to use a VPN. Or set up Unbound or Bind or PowerDNS Recursive…
KDEConnect?
It also breaks with more than one monitor on Wayland, might also be related to the scaling thing though.
Maybe check out Tailscale. It’s mainly a mesh VPN for your own devices, but they have a lot of options included so you can share stuff with other people.
Creative Commons is likely more appropriate for FOSR.
It would probably take someone to sue them, but they would have to implement it.
Cron sadly does not offer precision in the seconds range.
They could use vapoursynth + the official encoders. But at that point you’re programming your own processing pipelines.
Besides maybe confusing the codecs, hardware encoders, especially the AMD ones, are always less space efficient than software encoders.
If you want to convert video for long-term storage, please use a software encoder.
Yeah and after work hours. My work phone goes into silent mode every day 17.00 until 7.00 the next day with the schedule I set.
I recently found out about Softwareheritage, they also have yuzu mirrored.
I don’t think there’s any better alternative currently, but maybe something can be built based on the recent AACSv2 exploits.
I think GNU tar automatically detects the compression, making -a
unnecessary in that case.
It’s really not out of the way though
You hacked too hard