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I fairly constantly need to disable Bluetooth on my iPad so they work on my phone.
If you put the headphones in pairing mode, you can just re-pair with the phone without having to touch the iPad.
I fairly constantly need to disable Bluetooth on my iPad so they work on my phone.
If you put the headphones in pairing mode, you can just re-pair with the phone without having to touch the iPad.
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I don’t think I’ve ever come across a DNS provider that blocks wildcards.
I’ve been using wildcard DNS and certificates to accompany them both at home and professional in large scale services (think hundreds to thousands of applications) for many years without an issue.
The problem described in that forum is real (and in fact is pretty much how the recent attack on Fritz!Box users works) but in practice I’ve never seen it being an issue in a service VM or container. A very easy way to avoid it completely is to just not declare your host domain the same as the one in DNS.
If they’re all resolving to the same IP and using a reverse proxy for name-based routing, there’s no need for multiple A records. A single wildcard should suffice.
Not defending anyone here, but a paedophile is someone who’s sexually attracted to prepubescent children. I believe these days it’s extended to the early stages of puberty as well.
Most girls are well over that phase at age 14.
A 23 year-old having sex with a 14 year old may be morally and legally wrong depending on culture and jurisdiction, but the cases where it’s actual paedophilia are likely a small minority.
Again, I’m not defending anyone, but calling every person who’s attracted to minors a paedophile only serves to diminish the effect of the actual ones.
Man, that brings back memories! XGH is the OG agile methodology.
I loved ZD but I enjoy playing FW more. I find the combat better for my play style, and I’ve even done some of the hunting ground challenges which I found horrible in the first game.
I agree about the board game, except you can do as I do and just not play it. I don’t feel like I’m missing out on anything by skipping it.
Yes. Quite a bit. FW is at least as story-rich as ZD.
I also enjoy its gameplay more, even though the first one was already very enjoyable.
Not sure if this is helpful in any way, but it might give you some clue.
100./8 addresses are reserved for CG-NAT.
This is probably the IPv4 address your modem/router is receiving from the ISP.
“Quantum security” is a fairly widely accepted term in the industry and it has meaning.
Other terms with the same or similar meaning are quantum cryptography or post-quantum security.
https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/whitepaper/quantum-security-technologies
https://thequantuminsider.com/2023/07/17/quantum-security/
https://www.nomios.com/resources/what-is-quantum-security/
https://www.weforum.org/global_future_councils/gfc-on-cybersecurity/projects/quantum-security/
https://www.hashicorp.com/blog/quantum-security-and-cryptography-in-hashicorp-vault
https://blog.1password.com/passkeys-quantum-computers-encryption/
This is about them adding post-quantum encryption, which means encryption that could survive an attack using quantum computers.
This is computer science and mathematics, not pseudoscientific crap.
I might pick it back up some day but at the moment I have other projects going on at the moment.
I’m still using Proxmox myself but unfortunately it’s all fairly manually configured.
I started writing a Terraform provider for Proxmox a while ago.
Unfortunately, the API is a massive mess and the documentation is not very helpful either. It was a nightmare and I eventually gave up.
I’ve been running a 7900XTX for months without issue. Only thing that was missing was some stuff around power setting, fan curve etc but even that I think has been fixed in recent kernels.
Run sudo dmesg | grep amdgpu
and look for errors.
You may have a firmware file missing, for instance. If that’s the case, it’s an easy fix - just download the firmware files from the kernel tree and put them wherever your system wants them.
This is how I do it on Debian but it should be easy enough to adapt to whatever distribution you’re using (it might be exactly the same tbh): https://blog.c10l.cc/09122023-debian-gaming#firmware
K3s is k8s
lol at the downvote. K3s is k8s. The very first 2 words in its website are Lightweight Kubernetes
. https://k3s-io.github.io/
For what it’s worth you can get uBO on Orion browser right now.
Last time I tried to use that browser it was too buggy for me though.
Actually pretty much all browsers support tables, it’s been part of the HTML spec forever.
Oh I remember doing that as a kid. It blew my mind!
I don’t mind the order of path, arguments and options, but what the hell is the deal with long arguments with a single dash? i.e.
-name
instead of—-name