More importantly, does the attacker need physical access to the computer or can this be performed over the Internet/local network?
More importantly, does the attacker need physical access to the computer or can this be performed over the Internet/local network?
Another related question. Is the creator of Lemmy also the creator of torrents-csv? I ask because their dockerhub page hosts torrents-csv images as well as the lemmy one.
Cloudflare has dynamic DNS as well as a client to run on your server that will update automatically for you.
Here’s some flame bait:
Why would you want to listen to your music in this inferior format? I get it if there aren’t any modern recordings or quality transfers but to actually sit down and enjoy the low signal to noise ratio of a record just boggles the mind.
Private tracker and seed requirements is the reason that comes to mind for me. Back when I was on a private tracker some 20 years ago I would get the torrent file and the actual data from a friend so I could seed it without having downloaded it.
Aerial in the British way (antenna) or aerial in the normal way (hung between spans)? If it’s former, then I’m going to say BS but if it’s the later I would like to know more - right of way issues?
Do these 3rd party apps let you get rid of Shorts? I absolutely despise accidentally clicking on Shorts and would prefer if they actually stayed in the Shorts section so this doesn’t happen on my Home feed.
Take a look at that question again. OP Is asking why USB C isn’t standard and you gave an answer as to why it would be standard.
Not to mention that the satellite connection was meant for emergency calls and emergency calls already attempt to used ANY available cellular connection (not just your own carrier). This feature is only useful for people who spend considerable time outside of cellphone coverage areas and those people would be better served by an actual satellite phone.
40 Mbps is the amount of data that can be moved in one second; the difference between 20% saturation and 90% saturation should have negligible impact on latency. The bottleneck would occur if you OVERsaturate the line (ie. trying to pull more than 40mbps down) because then the packets would need to take turns coming in and possibly even be re-sent from the source if the latency is so bad that those packets are wiped from cache on routers or switches. (FUN FACT: this is basically how a DDOS attack works, too many packets are being thrown at your network and your router can’t say “no” fast enough to the bad data so latency approaches infinity and the good data ends up getting buried as well)
Mbps is a measurement for bandwidth not latency. However, it’s a little confusing what OP wants based on the image alone. The question marks in tandem with the bandwidth values makes me assume OP wants to know their outbound bandwidth but they are clearly asking for latency in the post text.
Did you ever figure out what was causing your issues?
Of course it’s the Russians selling this shit…
I have 2 pi 4. One of them runs Vaultwarden as my self-hosted password manager. The other runs TPLink Omada SDN management software to manage my switch and WiFi APs.
I recently saw my first Tesla Semi and also Tesla Truck in the wild. The semi was pretty cool but the truck looked like a toy or a prop and was smaller than I expected.
Thick as molasses… But not in the good way.
Hangouts still works. I believe it’s their longest running chat app.
Anybody know if this works for people self-hosting?
OP, are all of the working-as-expected VMs also members of the virbr0 network?
I’m thinking that this is a firewall issue on your VM host. If you DO NOT have any other working VMs then could you try disabling the firewall on the VM host and see if the VM can receive DHCP traffic.
I’ll answer because I found the information. It appears that the attacker would need to rely on physical access to the machine OR another exploit that lets them access the computer remotely.