[-] iwasgodonce@lemmy.world 55 points 4 months ago

In utah, I can average 80 mph on a road trip, in the houston texas area I can go maybe 20 mph average, so time is a lot more useful of a measure.

[-] iwasgodonce@lemmy.world 17 points 8 months ago

The jalapeno ones have way better flavor.

[-] iwasgodonce@lemmy.world 16 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)
  • DS-lite
  • switch
  • n(at)64

what networking term will they use for the next one? ndp?

[-] iwasgodonce@lemmy.world 16 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

https://loopsofzen.uk

If it doesn't work, you don't have working ipv6.

[-] iwasgodonce@lemmy.world 18 points 9 months ago

Hurry and buy a new graphics card before the prices go crazy again.

[-] iwasgodonce@lemmy.world 11 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I feel like a pretty good vehicle for a lot of people like that who need a truck sometimes and don't want a second vehicle could be one of the new small diesel trucks, like the ram ecodiesel. 30mpg is more than even most compact SUVs get, it's still a truck for people that like that, and it can haul/tow more than a compact suv as well.

A big problem with 2 vehicles instead of 1 is often that insurance costs so much more, even if you're driving the same number of miles as when you had 1 vehicle. Registration fees too.

[-] iwasgodonce@lemmy.world 6 points 11 months ago

I do and it's fine.

I used to have a separate machine for server stuff but it just cost more in electricity since I would leave them both on 24x7 anyway.

I've got 64G of ram and I often use up to 48 of it with various VMs. I wouldn't get any power savings with a separate server since I have a cron job to transcode everything that plex recorded off of TV during the day to av1 for disk space savings (usually turns 3GB of mpeg2 into 700MB of av1), so I would need a server with a moderately powerful cpu anyway for that.

I have a ryzen 3700X. got it since it was the highest performance that was still 65w tdp at the time, didn't want to spend a ton on electricity and extra air conditioning since I would be leaving it running 24x7.

The only time I notice a performance impact during gaming is if my windows 11 vm is running, I don't really need that one running 24x7 so I shut that one down if it happens to be running at the time.

[-] iwasgodonce@lemmy.world 7 points 1 year ago

I like yubikeys since it means I don't have to pull out my phone. totp on the laptop also works well enough.

sms based 2fa is the worst. it seems like to me every ceo and other non-technical c-level person I've known personally loves sms based 2fa though because they can't figure anything else out.

[-] iwasgodonce@lemmy.world 15 points 1 year ago

I'm pretty sure you can set alacritty and kitty to a ridiculously high number of scrollback lines, like at least several trillion. I think I just add 4 zeros on to the default and I've never had enough output for it to run out of scrollback. At some point you're going to run out of ram or storage for storing scrollback so you can't realistically have unlimited scrollback without doing something ridiculous.

[-] iwasgodonce@lemmy.world 14 points 1 year ago

I thought unencrypted cell networks went away in the 90s, scary they still exist.

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Their new modem/router doesn't support opening ports in the ipv6 firewall, so if you want to open ports, they recommend disabling ipv6 entirely. For ipv4, they no longer support forwarding ports from only specific source addresses either, which is way less secure. You can only forward ports from all source addresses. You also have to use their crappy app to add port forward rules, it's no longer available in the web ui. You can completely disable the ipv6 firewall in the web ui, but that wouldn't be safe.

Old motorola modem/routers could do all of the above.

It says it can do bridge mode at least, but it seems silly to need 2 devices just to open ipv6 ports.

How are routers being made now in 2023 that don't have proper ipv6 support? It seems crazy to me.

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[-] iwasgodonce@lemmy.world 6 points 1 year ago

One thing really annoying for me, there's only the 1 official "store" you can use and it doesn't support ipv6.

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/IPv6 says it's been available for apt since march 12th 2013.

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I'm on att for my home internet and unless you go to the effort to bypass their router (it does 802.1x authentication so it's a bit of a pain to do so), they only give you /64s via dhcpv6 prefix delegation, nothing bigger. You can request up to 8 of them though.

It looks like mikrotik can't request multiple prefixes in a single request, based on their documentation.

Edge routers look like they can if configured from the cli.

I've been using a linux box with dhcpcd and that works. Would be nicer if systemd-networkd supported multiple prefixes directly so I didn't have to try to get dhcpcd and systemd-networkd to try to play nice with each other since I use systemd-networkd for the lan side interfaces, wireguard, etc.

What other routers and dhcpv6 clients support requesting multiple prefixes in a single request? I'm looking to see if there's a better option out there than what I'm doing now.

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iwasgodonce

joined 1 year ago