not sharing the entire clip is criminal.
not to mention the sequel.
not sharing the entire clip is criminal.
not to mention the sequel.
i think he is looking at the meme which you are inside
yeah this project has been on github for six years and seems to have been closed source before that. it’s a graphical automation tool.
like, everything can be used with ai. github itself has “ai agent” plastered everywhere. it’s just a buzzword. doesn’t mean it’s built specifically for ai.
could be one of those cases where the product predates ai but some c-level asked an engineer “could we use this for ai” and the engineer said “i mean, technically yes” and then marketing changed every single mention of the product
that’s the original pronunciation from the 70s. like “gene”.


one of the funniest (and sadly accurate) things i’ve heard said about linux backwards-compatibility is that its most stable API is Win32. you can run really old windows software on wine because they support stuff even windows doesn’t anymore.
of course this is because the expectation is that you can just recompile old software to work on new systems, which is not really a thing on window.s


i like how everyone got hooked on the cgnat thing when i gave the actual solution in the main post. but yeah there’s always the option of not doing anything until i see issues.


i’ll worry about the nat traversal when i get my bouncer back up, but it will probably be less full-featured than pangolin. previously i just used a reverse ssh setup but that was a bit too rudimentary.


that’s also a possibility, but i’m going to have to whine to my isp.


as i said i’m getting my bouncer server set back up next year after the datacenter it’s in has finished renovations, so actually getting a public address is not the biggest issue.


i was sort of asking the opposite question to this answer, i think.


my registrar provides ddns, but how does that help with cgnat when thousands of people potentially have the same address?


i’ve set up servers with static ips in datacenter settings before. the way you know you’re online is usually that your cpu activity jumps a few percent from all the incoming ssh traffic from russia and china. i don’t want to risk anything happening to my home server.
so you stated with complete confidence something wrong that you could have looked up in two seconds?
it’s '86 for the record.
unless you’re using your pc as your router that’s not really the same thing
this is why i do theatre of the mind