They are commonly used with USB keystone connectors. For some reason most of them have A connectors on both sides.
They are commonly used with USB keystone connectors. For some reason most of them have A connectors on both sides.
It works fine with Syncthing so long as you only ever have the database open on one device at a time.
Since you can have multiple IPv6 addresses on one machine, you can use a rotating address for all outbound connections and a permanent address for inbound connections. If you visit a malicious website that tries to attack the IP that visits it, there will be no ports open. They would have to scan billions of addresses to find the permanent address. All of that scanning would be easily detected and blocked by an IDS.
That temporary fix will eventually become unnecessary. IPv6 has slowly getting more and more use.
It’s not even an issue with java. Apps ran fine on the original Android devices with single core CPUs and half a gig of RAM or less. It’s just that developers get lazier as more powerful hardware become available. Nobody cares about writing well optimized code anymore.
If Google and Apple required all apps to run smoothly on low end hardware from 5 years ago, we would be using our phones until the wear out rather than having to upgrade every couple of years if the batteries are replaceable.
We need some that are fully open source software and hardware. I’m tired of all of the proprietary crap.
One of those cheap Chinese mini PCs with an Intel N100 will give very good performance while drawing about 5 watts at idle.
That’s something that should be set up before leaving. You wouldn’t be able to do it away from home unless you already had remote access to a computer running at home or if your router had remote access enabled.
Run a VPN server at home, any decent router should be able to run one. Then you can be anywhere in the world and every site will still think you are at home.
The printer is obviously telling you to stuff some letters into your computer.
How about feet of IBM punch cards?
A 1 foot tall stack holds 1,647,360 bits of data if all 80 columns are used. If only 72 columns are used for data then it’s 1,482,624 bits of data and the remaining columns can be used to number each card so they can be put back in order after the stack is dropped.
All you should have to do is open the port in your firewall to the server. Also, make sure you are allowing ICMP through the firewall. It’s important for IPv6 and shouldn’t be blocked. If your server is running a firewall, don’t forget to open the port there too.
To test if it’s working, you can use the 5G connection on your phone since it should have IPv6.
If the scanner was working fine with the Pi before, I would suspect the USB cable or power supply. Try a different power supply and cables. The Raspberry Pi 3B+ can supply 1.2 amps from its USB ports which is sufficient for 2 bus powered devices. A powered USB hub can be used if you need to connect more bus powered devices to the Pi.
It’s negligible compared to the amount of space dust that enters the atmosphere and burns up every day.
I would set up a BBS with lots of text based games on it.
If you don’t have any of those ports open, then just ignore it. There are lots of bots out there that are just scanning for easy targets.
The latest version from kernel.org still uses master. It’s certainly possible for distro maintainers to change it on the versions they package though.
Master is still the default branch when you run git init
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CDs don’t have any copy protection other than the Sony rootkit mess, which they got sued over and had recall the infected discs. The copy protection on DVDs is automatically bypassed by software like Handbrake and generally not an issue.
Blurays require non free software such as MakeMKV to rip and UHD blurays need specific drives with modified firmware.
It depends on the PC. If it’s a mini ITX board with an unused 16 lane PCIe slot, you can put an adapter in there with 4 NVMe drives. Make sure the motherboard supports PCIe bifurcation though.
Another option is an M.2 to SATA adapter. They will connect 4 to 6 drives to an M.2 slot. Finding a place to mount those drives could be tricky though.