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2 yr. ago

  • I'm just hoping it paves the way for a public release of Steam OS that I can install on my own hardware (I'm aware of Bazzite, etc.).

    I'd have absolutely no reason to run Windows any longer, despite the fact my gaming PC does nothing but boot directly to Steam Big Picture mode.

    Unfortunately I think Nvidia will continue to make this difficult.

  • Why can't you just have a long lived internally signed cert on your archaic apps and LE at the edge on a modern proxy? It's easy enough to have the proxy trust the internal cert and connect to your backend service that shouldn't know the difference if there's a proxy or not.

    Or is your problem client side?

  • Automated certificates are relatively new and pretty neat. Killing off the certificate cartels is an added bonus.

  • You could try a path unit watching the cert directory (there are caveats around watching the symlinks directly) or most acme implementations have post renewal hooks you can use which would be more reliable.

  • You could try using the DNS challenge instead; I find it a lot more convenient as not all my services are exposed.

  • I'm not from the US, but my understanding is that the democratic party only want one thing? Namely the continuation of subsidies for health care for the less fortunate (not undocumented immigrants).

    Given the US is the only first world nation without Universal Health Care, that doesn't sound like "a bunch of shit" to me.

  • I have smart plugs from Innr, Samsung, Aqara (I think) and have never experienced the problem you're speaking of. Mine are all ZigBee -- not sure what yours are.

    That said, I just got a bunch of Shelly EM Mini G4 and put them in some PowerPoints and they work great.

    If you don't mind some basic wiring they're easy to set up.

  • Papers, please.

  • I think it's more the case it gets bundled in for free (or near enough) with other MS crap like Office.

  • Not really with the same flexibility.

    You only get usable capacity of the smallest disk in a vdev or you have to add a new vdev with your newly sized disks.

    Unraid lets you mix and match however you like and get all the usable capacity (as long as your parity is your largest sized disks).

  • Nym looks interesting and I hadn't heard of it before, but based on my reading I wouldn't say it supports wireguard.

    It implements wireguard but it still looks like you need to use their client instead of a vanilla wireguard one.

  • Sure. Open the app drawer, long press an app and there's a weird icon towards the bottom of the list with a plus symbol that'll let you add a new tag.

    After you've done that you can long press on the tags at the top to add/remove apps in bulk.

  • Doesn't the US have a constitutional amendment for this (maybe even the first one)?

    I'd think the "originalists" would be all for this.

  • Sigh. I wish this wasn't true.

    And let's not forget what is essentially Internet censorship.

  • I can't argue, but there are benefits.

    If you need something running 24/7 then on-prem may work out cheaper for you. Keep in mind you need a team of server monkeys to keep that running, and your company's security certifications will come nowhere near that of a major cloud provider.

    Cloud is good for elastic workloads. And you can save money that way if you're set up for it. A simple lift and shift will always be more expensive. But doing things like moving build tasks to spot instances and auto scaling capacity in peak periods is a huge win. No need to over provision your DC and no need to upgrade your hardware -- generally AWS releases new products at roughly the same price as old but with increased performance. You get upgrades "for free"* with no capex.

    Again I'm not saying that your circumstance means that cloud isn't more expensive. But there are medium term benefits.

    AWS refused to offer hybrid as an option for years. They've changed their tune in the past 5 or so. No reason not to take advantage and do what mix makes sense for you.

  • I'm legitimately curious to understand more (not challenging your assertions). They offer hosted Jira/Confluence and probably other stuff no-one cares about.

    What's the problem with adoption?

  • Cisco, HP, and many other "Enterprise" switches will take a minute or two to start forwarding frames after boot.

    Doesn't really excuse Ubiquiti but that's what they're trying for.