jake_jake_jake_

joined 1 year ago
[–] jake_jake_jake_@lemmy.world 5 points 3 weeks ago

I don't know enough about explosives to be sure but maybe having that trigger be a little bit further away from the armor makes it significantly more effective, or it's more of a moral booster, like putting sandbags on tanks.

[–] jake_jake_jake_@lemmy.world 26 points 3 weeks ago

i think with fingerprinting, it provides evidence that someone touched something, not that someone did not touch it

[–] jake_jake_jake_@lemmy.world 5 points 4 weeks ago

everything should be behind a firewall

[–] jake_jake_jake_@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

I rip ass, threaten fart, get out of my body.

[–] jake_jake_jake_@lemmy.world 8 points 1 month ago

the projection is strong in this one

[–] jake_jake_jake_@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

the questions of can they spy, and will they spy are different questions. at some US ISPs (at least the one i am at) the modems usually are only monitoring performance, ie number of packets, errored and discarded packets for troubleshooting. as far as the modem which i will assume is just a layer 2 bridge to your provider, usually not a whole lot going on there due to costs of the hardware. where the privacy violations are going to occur in the access equipment or core. this is what your modem connects to, then your traffic crosses on the way to the "greater internet" if your not using a vpn to outside of your provider, there is no way around it, they can and probably do tap into what your doing. a lot of them it may not be overly nefarious, i know my company does not sell customer data, and we generally only access it for troubleshooting and bandwidth analysis for upgrades, or as ordered by a court for law enforcement.

if you use a router from your isp almost every manufacturer is trying to sell all these different analytics and dpi that basically tells us what websites customers are visiting and how much/type of traffic to those sites, but directly from the router. same, or greater level of privacy violation as that can see local traffic on your lan, as well as watching wifi connection strength and scanning to see air quality and neighbors for "troubleshooting" or to sell access points.

[–] jake_jake_jake_@lemmy.world 75 points 1 month ago (27 children)

it's the attitude that one side says both sides have, but we know they (and you) already live in an invented reality anyway.

[–] jake_jake_jake_@lemmy.world 6 points 1 month ago

make sure it's configured for clean shut downs before your battery runs out, auto power up on restoration, and hope it doesn't happen. you will eventually have an outage that outlasts your batteries.

I have a large string of batteries from an old telco office, that runs my rack for 14hrs (calculated, I shut everything down around this time) and that did not last for the 2-3 day outage we had after a storm. Without a generator, you will inevitably have an outage, but if you are prepared, then you can mitigate any damage. use NUT if you need to shutdown or power multiple devices from one monitored UPS

[–] jake_jake_jake_@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago

if they are chaining them bandwidth will add up, and depending on the switching equipment they could be doing a large ring of some sort. it would be pretty easy to calculate since cameras are a pretty even throughput.

Looks like a air fiber 24 which is only 1.5Gbps throughput, 8-24mbps per camera would mean between 60-200 cameras, which for a state transportation department wouldn't be unreasonable, especially they are using these for something else, like interconnects between buildings for a metro-lan scenario.

[–] jake_jake_jake_@lemmy.world 6 points 1 month ago

I used to use kindles when I was growing up, as my dad and grandpa had large amazon libraries I was able to read from. It started with the keyboard kindles up to one of the touch e-ink ones and with the exception of the last one, every one of them had the screen fail.

I have since switched to a kobo clara 2e BW, using books loaded from calibre. the price point was comfortable, with more features than I expected (waterproof, bluetooth and wifi, ability to sign directly into library accounts), I was also happy with battery life, I read on planes/trains to pass the time and had a two week long trip where I was doing a lot of traveling by train and I didn't need to charge at all.

I plug into my computer and load books manually I also have been looking towards doing something OTA for books and page sync, libre and self hosted.

[–] jake_jake_jake_@lemmy.world 19 points 2 months ago (1 children)
[–] jake_jake_jake_@lemmy.world 4 points 2 months ago (3 children)

This is possible, and exact directions will vary on distribution of the vm client. I personally do this but with split horizon dns and dnsmasq on a vm.

impossible to leak is where it gets tricky, and that will require an understanding of networking in your distribution. there will also be tutorials on this, but it's very easy to mess up.

 
 
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