

I’m in it for the acting.


I’m in it for the acting.
Always is before a holiday when most employees are not available and no one is watching the feed.


There will be a q1 rush as enterprises buy up what they can before the price gouging sets in.
Then as buying returns to normal the profits will skyrocket due to short supply.
In right before the next us election the Transistor war will kick off with some sort of attack against fabs in Taiwan and the elections will be put on hold.
Can you hit the port?
Ping,Tracert,Knock on the port with Telnet.
I’m guessing firewall rules related to your vpn.


This is a trade off. Many of these apps work on osx and Linux because they are browser-based. If they go back to native apps you lose that portability.


Not really but here is as good a place as any
Wait how is there Doom drama?
There’s nothing wrong with hardware raid. You can probably pass them through as individual drives.
I would use them as is but only buy sata going forward.


Sounds like this affected a very small number of users. Anyone see this themselves?
Stop calling it green and start calling it cheap/free if you want to make some progress.


I will give it a shot. Looks like there’s a free demo.


Need to start somewhere. RISC-v is open source, the others are not.
Windows security baselines. They suck. Not because they are bad, but because they aren’t enforced defaults. Turning them on breaks something and you have to dig through decades of policy and app configuration to figure out why.
I wish once a year MS would have just made a security defaults update month and made a few changes so we could anticipate them and fix them collectively over time.


This is great, but also risc-v please.


You responded to a question with an incorrect answer. I was correcting that.
VPNs shouldn’t need to forward any ports when using ipv6. They can provide an entire ipv6 subnet to you.
I’ve used no-ip.com for years without issue.
My NAS supports a few services out of the box. If you have anything like that, see what they support natively first.