

They are set-and-forget, and no network engineers like tuning WiFi. I think the value is in not having to touch it.


They are set-and-forget, and no network engineers like tuning WiFi. I think the value is in not having to touch it.


Way back, i used to have a Linux TV with an app called Clementine on it for music. The magic was being able to just hit play on a song and the playlist used the scrobbles for LastFM to keep the thing going. Great for evenings with friends, it was like having Spotify before Spotify existed.
Feishin does this! It tries to keep the same style going, although I now used ListenBrainz instead.
The best case scenario is every one gets an equal slice of the pie so as no one player becomes the dominant force because everyone is fucking crazy.
One of the reasons I love FOSS is that it’s really difficult to corner the market and then try to screw people over, cause they’ll just leave. At the corporate level, it take a bit longer to leave because of contracts, but the principle still works.
Not that Sun was the best or anything, but when Oracle happened, it spawned projects we all know and love well.


Feishin has turned out to be pretty great.


Yeah, this is what led me to convert my APs to openwrt


Clamav is woefully behind on definitions, just be aware of that.


Your overuse of terms you don’t quite understand suggests your deep-dive isn’t that technical.
None of what your blurb says is new, and DPI has been around for longer than ten years.
Clanker.


On select machines.
You’d just take longer with more effort to get there
That may be. But I’ll retain what I learned. And the effort IS THE POINT!
I’ll repeat myself: GO LEARN IT YOURSELF.


Yeah, it’s very handy. The switches are a bit different, depending on what you’re trying to identify, but
pgrep -l <term>
Will usually get it done.
Yeah. Let’s not learn what the logs means ourselves or anything.
Jfc, no one wants to think for themselves anymore. Your brain is shrinking. Read a book.


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Packages are installed and removed from disk, but unless you kill the offending process(es), it might remain active in memory, depending on the quality of the install/remove script.
You can use ps, pgrep or any number of utils to figure out which process is the one to get rid of, and just kill it.
Gaben stands on the shoulders of giants.
Back in the day, we all wanted Google to fill that role…
You just came here to guess? Or why did you post this knowing nothing on the topic?
DDOS attacks do not always happen on https, though. You can overwhelm a system with DNS, NTP, or even just malformed packets. Anubis would do nothing for this.
You cannot stop a DDOS, you can only mitigate one with more capacity. That’s why there are only a few big players who can do it.
Canonical itself was unable to stop a DDOS attack and they’re distributed. You won’t stop a DDOS if that DDOS is meant for you.
No, Anubis creates a throttle to stop ai scrapers from taking down https web resources.
What’s the rationale for this? Genuinely curious.