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This seems counter to Concept 6 in the OP.
for residential internet, the globally routable prefix can change
Do you mean that ISPs don’t regularly rotate your PD in practice? I’d actually prefer that they did to maintain a semblance of privacy.
Migrated account from @CosmicTurtle@lemmy.world
This seems counter to Concept 6 in the OP.
for residential internet, the globally routable prefix can change
Do you mean that ISPs don’t regularly rotate your PD in practice? I’d actually prefer that they did to maintain a semblance of privacy.
An issue I had the last time I tried to set up IPv6 up was pihole didn’t work as well as I would have preferred. I assumed I just didn’t set up things correctly and it’s looking like that is the case based on the OP.
It kept resolving ad domains with their IPv6 address.
I literally wrote like a week ago for a guide like this
This is awesome and answers so many questions. I kept trying to force IPv6 addresses to my machines and they kept not doing it! I also didn’t know they would have multiple addresses.
Be really careful with this.
Depending on how you contribute to your OSS code, commits you make on company time are considered property of the company. You could, unknowingly, be forcing your code to be closed source if your company ever decides to make a claim for it.
I prefer to keep things bifurcated. I never reuse my own library and if I do, I rewrite it whole cloth.
I always felt that this is where cloud computing should be. If you’re not building all the time, then 32GB is overkill.
I know most editing and rendering of TV shows happen on someone’s computer and not in the cloud but wouldn’t it be more efficient to push the work to the cloud where you can create instances with a ton of RAM?
I have to believe this is a thing. If it isn’t, someone should take my idea and then give me a slice.
When I was last looking for a fully remote job, a lot of companies gave you a “technology allowance” every few years where they give you money to buy a computer/laptop. You could buy whatever you wanted but you had that fixed allowance. The computer belonged to you and you connected to their virtual desktops for work.
Honestly, I see more companies going in this direction. My work laptop has an i7 and 16GB of RAM. All I do is use Chrome.
Probably the notion that they’d be required to release proprietary code. I never heard a reason as to why we can’t use software with copyleft. Just that we can’t.
Logseq seems very interesting. It looks similar to “OneNote” in terms of overall approach but open source. The main issue my company would have is that the license is AGPL. My company refuses to use any license that includes Copyleft.
I reviewed it and it looks like they use a proprietary license. Unless I missed something.
And MS Store doesn’t help. Each program that shows up on my work’s MS Store is approved.
As for trying it myself, I use Linux as my main workhorse. 😜
Ah…I never thought about it that way but you are right! Snibox wouldn’t work for my use case but a quick google search came up with a few possible ones.
Thank you!
Company has a wiki, but doesn’t have the feature of doing a tag-based search. It wouldn’t be much better than my notepad, though the benefit would be that it could copy html.
I can install apps but it has to clear cyber security.
I can’t host a matrix instance and would be overkill for what I’m trying to do.
Markdown isn’t any better than my current method of writing in a text file. I don’t need synchronization.
This comes the closest so far.
The saving feature might be the deal breaker, unless it can be done via a file (json, yaml, etc) that is committed along with the page. I’ll explore this more. Thanks for the suggestion
Say I buy a tomato. Tomato is sold to me as tomato, grown in a green house. It’s a good tomato.
I bring it home and I cut into it to make salsa and find a razor blade. I didn’t see any markings on the outside. I don’t know how it got there.
I go back to the store and say, “Dude, what the fuck is up with the razor blade?!”
They say, “Oh, we noticed a lot of people buying tomatoes to cut them so we decided to include a razor blade! You’re welcome!”
I say, “But I don’t want a razor blade. I just want the tomato!”
They say, “Oh…that’s too bad. We think you’ll really like the razer blade.”
I say, “I don’t care. I want a tomato without razor blades.”
They say, “ok. Just make sure you present this very specific, very distinct bar code to the check out person.”
I go and buy another tomato, present the barcode.
I bring it home and it has a different type of blade inside it.
I go back to the store and they say, “Well, you opted out of blade model a. This is blade model b.”
I consented to buy a tomato. Not to buy a razer blade.
I consented to install Windows OS, not fucking copilot, Cortana, Xbox central, etc.
I should have full control over my OS, regardless of who makes it. Even Ubuntu Linux had some sketchy adware that had to be removed (this was like Ubuntu 18 or something can’t remember).
Fwiw, AWS offers a one-time egress without charge in response to the EU order to allow people to switch cloud providers.
Once approved, we will provide credits for the data being migrated. We don’t require you to close your account or change your relationship with AWS in any way. You’re welcome to come back at any time. We will, of course, apply additional scrutiny if the same AWS account applies multiple times for free DTO.
So if you’re going to do this for that one time you have to, probably not a big deal.
But if I were you, I’d be prepared to egress, kill the account, and then create a new account.
I like how you wrote this so that if the command fails, it continues with the rest.
If ad domains can be resolved to their IPv6 addresses, it means that they are not blocked. Your device connects to the IPv6 address and serves the ad.
I can’t remember what the problem was but my window to rollback was closing so I reverted back to IPv4 only and pushed it to another day.