Comment Re:Is this traffic mostly phones? (Score 1) 73
There is likely a much higher density with phones. But anyone with a modern ISP and modern router has the majority of their home devices just using IPv6 natively, seamlessly.
There is likely a much higher density with phones. But anyone with a modern ISP and modern router has the majority of their home devices just using IPv6 natively, seamlessly.
That's okay, they have tons of mass transit. Just use that, right?
I'd rather not see them release fast and possibly buggy but instead go slow and have a very stable release.
Having been perfecting some expert mode installs with LMDE's live-installer, I'm glad to hear they're doing the same with LM. Consolidating is a win for the devs and the users.
I would like to see some improvements to live-installer's expert modes to allow for fully scriptable installs. I know this isn't like to be the direction the devs are looking for, but I sure would like to have a way to mass roll-out LM/LMDE.
Do they have to complete their time in the re-education camp first or not?
And no snaps or telemetry.
Mozilla ESR repository works just fine. I've been using it for a near decade, even before snaps, as I wanted more control as to when I'd shift versions and prefer the slower pace of ESR.
I began shifting to Linux Mint about 5 years ago and the same Mozilla ESR repo works great there as well.
Trust but verify.
Direct link to video at just the right time:
https://youtu.be/EyjnoksVSL4?t...
Yet again, the Babylon Bee nailed it....
..."making DOS-literacy portable."
I believe it was when MS-DOS 5.0 came out and my dad purchased a copy at the beginning of the summer at Fry's in Sunnyvale. I read the instruction manual for the commands cover to cover. I used to commute with him during the summer to the Silicon Bay Area and would use his laptop to try out all of the commands and learn all of the flags. Bored teenager about to enter high school, but learning "archaic" commands like this has served me well.
When other kids were taking typing classes in HS, I was doing self-study learning NetWare (all from books), and then I'd get home and dink with our home server. I was fortunate to get a job the day after graduating HS in the Silicon Bay Area with my skills, and the sky has been the limit since then doing what I enjoy.
As much as I dislike many of BG & MS monopolistic and "crush all competition" practices, I do owe him some thanks for MS-DOS and the timing of the PC revolution. Having a PC of my own, even if it was a "Blue Chip" clone with Hercules monochrome was pretty amazing having MS-DOS and GW-BASIC to learn on. I typed up a ton of free BASIC games found in free trade magazines available at Fry's. I'm pretty sure this was the model I had, but no modem (that came a year or so later):
https://www.upi.com/Archives/1...
It's a publicity stunt to pump up the book sales of his new Source Code book.
HA and Kasa doesn't require any cloud/IoT access. It works 100% local.
I guarantee you that the vampire power draw of many devices, especially gaming consoles and entertainment systems, dwarfs the power draw of a Kasa smartplug.
I've implemented dozens of these throughout the house. All blocked from any cloud access, and only deployed where the power savings outweighed the cost of the device factored over 5 years of savings, including the constant power draw of the Kasa device.
Why did the intern have access? Why was a smartphone allowed into an area with top secret files and without controls to block it from being connected? So many fails.
"Rich kids" - if you mean people just above the poverty level. Even then, I see people on welfare with the latest iPhone.
Cost of living may be higher, but there are plenty of ways they're flat out living beyond their means. What is in their pocket, on their wrist? I'm betting the cell phone, car keys, and even watch is well beyond their means. Further, it's not like it is a one-and-done financial mistake, it's a lifestyle of excessive overspending and upgrading.
I'm a Luddite. I still have a wrist watch my wife bought me 20 years ago. When I take it for a battery replacement, jewelers are surprised to see such an old model in great shape. I will keep my cell $250 ($100 off) phone 5 years and only upgrade because I require my devices to have security updates. I finally purchased a new car, cash, because my 27 year old SUV had 3 different issues and was going to cost more than double what it was worth to fix. But I'm also not broke, own everything, no debt, and will retire at 55.
(1) Never draw what you can copy. (2) Never copy what you can trace. (3) Never trace what you can cut out and paste down.