

Is that CPU cooler resting on your GPU or is that just the perspective messing with me? It looks rather dangerous.
Is that CPU cooler resting on your GPU or is that just the perspective messing with me? It looks rather dangerous.
/120? /48 and /64 are common assignments, where /48 is imho preferred as it allows you to easily use SLAAC inside your network. I’ve seen plenty of home setups too and I don’t know how to say this nicely but you should really read up on IPv6 before posting comments like this pretending you have an idea what you’re talking about. Seriously.
I don’t agree that you usually would still use NAT with IPv6. I’ve never seen NAT in combination with IPv6 and I’ve seen plenty of deployments at our customers. NAT is not the same as a firewall, so just using public IPv6 addresses does not mean that you are exposing every port by default. I think you should read up on IPv6 and firewalling before making statements like this :)
Edit: you don’t even have to set up firewalling on each internal device… the router/firewall blocks inbound traffic by default.
Without knowing the details of C, I’ve seen this in other languages and it’s usually something with missing a flush or a buffered output mode or something like that.
You could also see it as you preventing someone else from learning from their own mistakes. Maybe reframing it like that could help with skipping :)
Yeah I totally agree, I hate that they keep adding new stuff instead of focussing on their core business. It’s especially annoying as the Android Protonmail app and the regular web mail client are really bare bones and have several long standing issues. Honestly if I had set it up with my own domain instead of the @pm.me (which admittedly is a nice suffix) I probably wouldn’t be a paying customer anymore.
I feel this is missing a couple of !important statements :)
Jealous of the amount of free time you have available ;-) good luck!
I’d recommend scheduled tasks instead. Why be involved at all? :-)
I never said anything about Onyx, I don’t own one but have considered them. They look nice and open.
I do own a couple of Kobo devices though and just wanted to say it’s not running Android of any kind but it’s still relatively open. Especially compared to phones, tablets and Kindle. The firmware/OS point you’re trying to make is irrelevant there and I think you know it :)
There is NickelMenu and you can telnet into it. You can also install other OS like KOReader easily, it doesn’t have a locked bootloader or anything like that. So imho that’s pretty accessible and open.
We are talking about the Kobo right? It’s not running any kind of Android or AOSP fork.
No it’s not running Android.
Using Calibre you could probably glue that together. I wouldn’t want Android on an ereader personally.
It’s not open source but it is easily rooted and you can install custom add-ons or even replace the os.
That’s no longer a technical process issue but more of a teamcoach/HR kind of issue then. You should be able to assume good intentions from colleagues, imho.
We use a CI pipeline check which prevents merges to master if the code contains a TODO. A precommit hook only works if the developer has the hooks configured.
They won’t. Most people just don’t care at all unfortunately :(
Well it’s not 2024 yet.
Ah yes you’re right!