

Also Stratum which is another open source authenticator app.
I like it because it has a Wear OS companion app.


Also Stratum which is another open source authenticator app.
I like it because it has a Wear OS companion app.


deleted by creator


It’s possible that, when the ISP revokes the public address and assigns a new one, the DNS record isn’t updated immediately and still points to the old address. Then every new request would be sent to the old, invalid address.
I’ve got it set up on my OPNSense firewall
OPNsense has ddclient built in which solves this problem as well.


The fact it has been attempted and rejected multiple times and has to be proposed under different guises supports the idea that the EU is not actually friendly to the idea of backdoors to encryption, and, as you just pointed it out, it is the meddling of lobbyists and nationalists that keeps the proposal coming back.


Europe… the guys that want backdoors into all encrypted communication
Europe… the guys who rejected a proposal to put back doors into all encrypted communication.


If you have a subscription from another EU country then it must work in every other EU country even if subscriptions aren’t offered in that country.
For example, I’m in Ireland and Sky has exclusive broadcast rights for F1 here. So what I did was i used a VPN to create an F1TV account in Portugal. Once the Portugeuse subscription is active it just works as normal in Ireland and I don’t need a VPN any more for normal use.
I did this about 2 years ago and just set the Portuguese subscription to auto-renew annually and I haven’t had to use a VPN at all in those two years.
If i go travelling outside the EU I use my own VPN server at home. By connecting to my home network via VPN, F1TV thinks I’m watching from my home network, which means i can watch F1TV from anywhere in the world.


The only good mobile games that i can think of are ports.
Like Knights of the Old Republic.


I have a 64GB Crucial SSD from about 2010 that’s still going.
I use it as a boot drive for a Pi instead of using a microsd card.
We basically have this in Ireland. Only instead of a log cabin its an old cottage in the middle of nowhere.
An old cottage with a gigabit connection.


Use a reverse proxy in a DMZ. You can use something like Bunkerweb + Crowdsec to give you a WAF and dynamic IP blocklist in front of your web service.


I’ve been running Home Assistant (HAOS) on Proxmox for years with no issues. It doesn’t need to be on bare metal. VMs work fine.


They collect them. And when they have enough they can trade them in for a large stuffed animal.
WG Tunnel is a really useful wireguard client I’ve been using for a while.
I use it to automatically enable a wireguard tunnel to my home network as soon as i leave my home WiFi. And I can assign different wireguard configs to different wifi networks when im out and about where the default wireguard config might be blocked, and it will switch between them automatically.
It has loads of other useful features too.