[-] magnus@lemmy.ahall.se 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

The Kame ipsec project (https://www.kame.net) has a turtle image which is animated if visited with an IPv6 address.

[-] magnus@lemmy.ahall.se 1 points 7 months ago

Been using the Kensington Expert Wireless a couple of years now.

[-] magnus@lemmy.ahall.se 1 points 7 months ago

My go to smartphone keyboard is MessagEase. A few larger buttons instead of many small. You can get quite fast on it, and larger buttons means fewer mistakes.

[-] magnus@lemmy.ahall.se 1 points 10 months ago

That was me writing a colon which didn't need to be there :-)

[-] magnus@lemmy.ahall.se 1 points 11 months ago

I'm horrfied every day at work that copy/paste still is an issue. All my coworkers and customers are still struggling with copying some data, switching to another program, pasting it, switching back, copying some other data, and so on, especially when needing two or three data frequently.

In Windows, a (bad) solution is using win+tab, which literally no one knows about, much less uses.

In Linux (and should be in Windows too), it is trivial to implement buffers (say 0-9) to store and retrieve clipboard data for subseconds access.

[-] magnus@lemmy.ahall.se 2 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Javascript/Preact/Lesscss on frontend with a backend written i Go, using Postgres for data needs. Sometimes with websockets in between if needed.

[-] magnus@lemmy.ahall.se 1 points 1 year ago

You are completely right about SwitchOS, and it is even more exciting that some models sells in two versions, with the only difference being called CSS* for SwitchOS, or CRS* for RouterOS. And the SwitchOS-enabled model is much cheaper, so customers ordering for themselves almost always pick the wrong one (that is, SwitchOS, which we can't manage properly in our automations and other software solutions).

[-] magnus@lemmy.ahall.se 1 points 1 year ago

Can only agree on Mikrotik routers. All are using RouterOS, which works the same on all their devices, from routers to switches and access points.

They are relatively cheap for the capabilites you're getting. They have their own scripting language, two APIs (their new one is REST-based).

GUI (winbox is recommended, and plays nice with wine. Wouldn't recommend web interface, just cumbersome) and CLI exists.

They have a lot of builtin functionality, like DHCP server, DNS server with static configuration, and even file sharing. Some models are powerful enough to run Docker images on (yes, that's builtin...).

We're running a couple of hundred and don't have much problem with them.

[-] magnus@lemmy.ahall.se 1 points 1 year ago

We're using Ansible for a lot of stuff, with Semaphore as a frontend.

Semaphore has rudimentary support for CI/CD. We don't need all the bells and whistles of something like Jenkins, and Semaphore is saving us from having yet another software to know and and maintain.

[-] magnus@lemmy.ahall.se 1 points 1 year ago

If anyone is using specifically n8n and would like a small backup/change log, I could provide the workflow and the frontend code. A small change of n8n webhook URL is probably only what's needed to get it running.

[-] magnus@lemmy.ahall.se 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Yeah, tried that first, but the read onlyness was a slight problem :)

[-] magnus@lemmy.ahall.se 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I guess that means able to access services on the Internet over IPv6, not me being able to get a /64 and providing services myself to others.

Sort of ok for phones I guess, although not as great if someone doesn't have access to fiber and have to use a mobile link in a residential environment.

Bahnhof actually just provides NAT:ed fiber connections as well as default, but will issue a public, unique IP if asked (at no additional cost).

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magnus

joined 1 year ago