I built my website with
fortune
, cowsay
, toilet
, lolcat
and aha
I built my website with
fortune
, cowsay
, toilet
, lolcat
and aha
Run your own DNS server on your network, such as Unbound or pihole. Setup the overrides so that domain.example.lan resolves to a local IP. Set your upstream DNS to something like 1.1.1.1 to resolve everything else. Set your DHCP to give out the IP of the DNS server so clients will use it
You don’t need to add block lists if you don’t want.
You can also run a reverse proxy on your lan and configure your DNS so that service1.example.lan and service2.example.lan both point to the same IP. The reverse proxy then redirects the request based on the requested domain name, whether that’s on a separate server or on the same server on a different port.
That’s fine. You can try learn yourself. I’m just saying it’ll be a slower process. The thing with instruments and music in general is that coming in with no knowledge of music theory at all will require a fair bit of work that’s much easier if someone explains it to you. Having said that you dont need music theory to just play some tunes. Learn all the open chords, practice switching between them and you’ll be able to make your own music soon enough.
I would take a look at Songsterr.com. I use it all the time for playing along with songs where you can read the tab and hear how it should sound.
Remember that you might want to play like Jimmy Page or John 5, but you probably don’t want to do what they did to get there. That’s the same with anything. You don’t see the hours and hours of hard work that went in to being able to play that good. Just stick with it. Set yourself an achievable goal and stick with it.
Get in person lessons. You’ll learn more in 2 weeks than in 1 year of trying to teach yourself.
It took me 25 years before I took a lesson and I wish I’d done it sooner.
Come as You Are by Nirvana is a good one to start with.
Your fingers will hurt. That’s good. They’ll toughen up if you push through it.
I imagine they use it in much the same way as any enterprise. Running servers and workstations, mostly.
F16’s run Kubenetes clusters.
Lots of individual bits of hardware on specialized devices will be running embedded operating systems. QNX is big in automotive for the same reasons it’d work on a rocket.
As someone who worked on a pre-systemd linux system with multiple NICs and needed them all configured automatically from an OS image based on where it was in the rack, I can’t stress enough how good deterministic interface names are.
Booting up a system and each time having different names for each NIC was a nightmare.
Frankly 90+% of what systemd has done is tremendously positive and makes linux a better operating system to use, both for sys admins and end users.
I’ve recently bought some studio monitors to replace a hifi I was using and they didn’t come with grilles. Seems to be a difference between studio kit and the hifi world.
Not being predictable by us does not mean they offer free will.
The preconditions are so precise that you’ll never be able to get exactly the same results from trying to do the same thing twice - you’ll never be able to do the same thing twice. But that doesn’t stop cause and effect determining the outcome. There is no place where free will can enter in to any equation at any micro or macroscopic level and just having unpredictable microscopic events doesn’t give you control of your own destiny. This is totally separate from your own perceptions of having choices you make. Personally I find myself doing things I didn’t consciously choose to do. Once you start noticing them you might find more and more.
No idea about socials, but some will do a DBS check
Eastern Ukraine isn’t an ideal tourist spot at the moment.
I don’t understand it either. On one hand people say don’t remember addresses, use DNS and on the other DNS relies on static addresses but then every device is “supposed” to have random addresses via SLAAC or privacy addresses. It just doesn’t seem to tie together very well, but if you use them like IPv4 addresses you’re apparently doing it wrong.
You have very different kids to me.
What about it is fiddly?
The insane addresses. The reliance on DNS, the unpredictability of addresses, that each device can have so many addresses and you need to know what each does and is used for and how that impacts inter-network routing and firewall rules. Privacy IPs, what the hell? Its a solution to something that’s fixed by tried and understood IPv4 NAT.
If you just want a flat simple network where everything on your lan is equal, everything has a globally unique and trackable IP I’m sure it’s fine. But if you have something more sophisticated it becomes much more complicated. And I genuinely can’t see how IPv6 advocates can’t see the problems it introduces.
What we need is a larger address space and fast adoption, that’s it. If after 30 years of awful adoption rates and only when people have a gun to their head they begrudgingly might adopt it, then you have a bad protocol.
But at that point there’s no difference other than it’s less familiar and more fiddly with v6. Why even bother.
Here’s my story of trying to use IPV6 for the past 3 days, and I know I’m not a typical user.
I use Opnsense as a router firewall. Using IPv4, 5/6 VLANs, almost all devices statically addressed with alias’s configured for each. This lets me have firewall rules like “block youtube on the kids devices”, or “use a different DNS server for the wife”, only allow the fire stick to access the internet after 7am. That sort of thing.
First problem is working out how to even get IPv6 on the WAN and what it even means that my ISP has given me a /48 and a /64. Loads of reading and some cobbling together later I have it. But no clients are getting addresses. Eventually fix that and now they have an address. But I don’t want to use SLAAC as that’s a nightmware to keep track of, DHCPv6 doesn’t work for android devices so they’ll be on IPv4 anyway. I don’t want each client to have a globally unique address as that just allows insane tracking. I don’t know if my IPv6 address will ever change, but it seems likley it will and that would be a nightmare to fix. I manage to get private fd00/8 addresses allocated to clients, but I don’t know how to configure IPv6 NAT so devices have an IPv6 IP, but can’t access through the WAN using it. And by that point I just don’t see the point any more. I’d just be duplicating all my rules that would be far too time consuming, confusing and I don’t see the point.
I want local private IP addresses. I don’t want clients to have unique IPs. I want the addresses to be known and static. I want my firewall rules to be tied to specific addresses for 90%+ of devices.
RAID IS NOT BACKUP RAID IS NOT BACKUP RAID IS NOT BACKUP
Don’t use Red drives for a NAS!! You need the Red Plus (or is it red pro) disks as they’re CMR.
I’d go for Ultrastar drives personally. There’s a few really good videos online analyzing the backblaze stats for different drives that are well worth watching.
Everywhere? Where will we put all the existing things? You can’t turn the whole world in to just toilets, that’s taking the piss!
Or save yourself a character and just yay
How’d you set that up with Opnsense fail over? I have an opnsense VM with input straight from the ISPs FTTP box to the NIC on my server. So I can’t fail over to my second proxmox box without swapping the cable over.