I’m the administrator of kbin.life, a general purpose/tech orientated kbin instance.

  • 0 Posts
  • 195 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 29th, 2023

help-circle
  • Well good news. Because ipv6 has a thing called privacy extensions which has been switched on by default on every device I’ve used.

    That generates random ipv6 addresses (which are regularly rotated) that are used for outgoing connections. Your router should block incoming connections to those ips but the os will too. The proper permanent ip address isn’t used for outgoing connections and the address space allocated to each user makes a brute force scan more prohibitive than scanning the whole Ipv4 Internet.

    So I’m going to say that using routable ipv6 addresses with privacy extensions is more secure than a single Ipv4 Nat address with dnat.



  • I’d go further than that and say that deciding to leave the house or not, are both gambles.

    But in the context of spending money with the only net result being you lose money, make money or retain the same money with no other goods or services provided in return. Then gambling is the primary attribute of that spend.

    Bookmakers and investments meet that criteria, your other purchases are not.






  • Well, it’s generated in the same way as modern tones are in a telephone exchange, not a played sample. You can usually configure the tone frequencies (never tried on cisco ip phone, but asterisk allows it for its own generated tones and I had a cisco ATA that let you configure them).

    So, unless we’re limiting ourselves to the original mechanically generated dial-tones. I’ll consider them for all intents and purposes to be one and the same.

    E.g. for the UK on cisco/sipura ATAs you would use the configuration found here https://teamhelp.sipgate.co.uk/hc/en-gb/articles/208200875-UK-Regional-Settings-Cisco-Linksys-Sipura-Adaptors and as an example (dial tone)

    Dial Tone: 350@-19,440@-22;10(*/0/1+2)

    The comfort noise is also generally only added when there’s no other noise on the call. This is to prevent you thinking you were disconnected when no-one is talking.












  • But if you’re staying on one of the main islands, instead of paying the 5 euro entry ticket you pay the (up to) 5 euro hotel tax

    City tax is a thing in pretty much every Italian tourist city. We’ve done the stay in Mestre thing, and it is indeed cheaper (the train ticket is really cheap). But, you have to be clear of the main islands before the last train/bus and it’s much better to not have to worry about such things.

    There’s some decent priced places to stay on the island. I mean not compared to a hostel for sure, but still reasonable overall compared to a hotel.


  • You have to pay 5€ to visit

    You only have to pay that if you’re a day visitor. If you’re staying on one of the main islands, you don’t need to pay. The place you’re staying should have a tourism site ID code, which you can enter on the site to get exemption.

    a giant sewer city

    I never get why this image is so prevalent. Just visit a month or two before or after the main summer months. May or September perhaps, it’s usually still warm, and I’ve visited many times now and only had a few days when in a few select areas it was a bit smelly. The idea it’s common is just plain wrong based on all of my visits.

    with no trees

    There are trees quite literally everywhere. Maybe not on Rialto bridge, though. Even next to San Marco, there are some nice gardens. Further along at the Biennale, you will see many more gardens. There’s also a garden right by Piazzale Roma and the train station. Once you leave the main tourist areas, you’ll see plenty of trees pretty much everywhere.

    two people per every square meter

    Go slightly off season, and actually leave Rialto and San Marco alone once you’ve seen them. You can walk for literally 2 minutes and go from serious crowds to totally alone from either of those locations.