I bought a refurbished SFF PC and put a PCIe NIC in it. Installed opnSense.
Cheap as chips. Supremely powerful.
I bought a refurbished SFF PC and put a PCIe NIC in it. Installed opnSense.
Cheap as chips. Supremely powerful.
I’m not saying it was aliens, but it was aliens.
I have X years experience with {keyword salad}.
Can you confirm {details already in the opening post}?
I still double-check my CIDR’s/netmasks and expected ranges with a tool (some online one or other). Easier to avoid silly mistakes or typo’s
TL;DR: it depends entirely on the DHCP server software.
Generally the safe/reliable policy is to assign a smaller DHCP range (or ranges) and allocate static assignments outside of the DHCP range(s).
Assume your network is 192.168.1.0/24.
Specify 192.168.1.128/25 for DHCP, which means all DHCP addresses will be above 192.168.1.128.
This leaves you everything below 192.168.1.127 for static assignments.
But then they can’t force you to watch claim that you watched the ad at the start of the video for that sweet advertiser revenue.
This is why it’s important to have tests that assert a system’s failure modes too.
shouldFitTriangleInTriangleHole()
shouldNotFitTriangleInAnyOtherHoles()
Bonus points for just parameterizing it.
Another vote for immich.
I trialled several before finding immich. It is by far the best that I’ve found.
It was literally the tag line for Windows 98 I think!
The gag was that it just (barely) works.
No-one who buys a PC with windows preinstalled gets any choice at all… and had the preinstalled malware cme with it.
DFQOH
I can’t work out what this an acronym for. Please help!
Yes it is. Pick a newbie friendly distribution. Say Ubuntu.
IMHO Windows is only “user friendly” because it’s preinstalled on most PC’s.
User friendliness comes with experience.
Amazing. I get there’s some atlassian bullshittery behind that.
There’s also a draw.io (diagrams.net) plugin for intellij and probably eclipse.
I’ve used coreos happily on homelab bare metal.
PXE booting it with cloudinit/ignition automation for provisioning.
It’s make for an excellent VPS.
Cut it in half and avoid the spec violating abomination.
You’d probably be able to remove the cooler’s non-compliant a-port and just solder the cable directly.
Then at least it’ll be less of an abomination.
adequate: of a quality that is acceptable but not better than acceptable
The default theme is also adequate for my needs. I don’t even change the wallpaper from the default.
Themes apparently require better than “adequate”.
GNOME is entirely adequate for my professional needs, which is… entirely adequate.
;-)
If you’re using LVM, ZFS, or Btrfs then you can use their features and tooling to migrate data from one disk to the other, assuming you’re able to connect both at the same time.
I’ve done this online with btrfs several times now and it’s quite painless, admittedly only for self hosted stuff.