

leaving as much of a mess behind as possible so that no one can benefit from the resources. Essentially, “if we can’t have it, no one can”
makes me wonder about nukes.


leaving as much of a mess behind as possible so that no one can benefit from the resources. Essentially, “if we can’t have it, no one can”
makes me wonder about nukes.


are all lemmy instances federated with tardigram.com?


the windows driver allows for full wifi-6/7 speeds in ap mode and is the only way, afaik, to get it with intel cards
there are other efforts to backwards engineer or hack the changes that disables higher speeds in ap mode for linux; but none worked when i tried about 10-ish months ago. i tired these ones:
https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2020/wifi-6-gets-134-gbps-on-raspberry-pi-cm4 https://gist.github.com/iffa/290b1b83b17f51355c63a97df7c1cc60 https://askubuntu.com/questions/1163145/intel-wireless-iwlwifi-ubuntu-19-04-slow-upload-speed-but-only-on-certain-wi/1163146#1163146
and if you don’t have a windows key like me, do yourself a favor and create a windows image instead of a vm and keep re-using it to get around the windows validation setup timeout after 30 days. (i didn’t realize this until after the fact so i had to create a work around with ansible to stop/copy/paste/launch the vm every 30 days)


i have a single box i use for data storage; backup; wifi; router; and switch.
it runs ubuntu on the bare iron with
topographically, it looks like this, but in reality it’s all one box:
┌────┐ ┌─────────────┐
┌───────────────────┤vpn │ ┌──────────────────┤windows (wifi│
▼ └────┘ │ └─────────────┘
┌──────────┐ │
│ internet │ │
└──────────┘ ▼ ┌───────┐ ┌──────┐ ┌───────────┐
▲ ┌─────────┐ │ubuntu │◄───────┤switch│◄─────┤ backups │
└────────────────┤ pfsense │◄─────────────────┴───────┘ └──────┘ └───────────┘
└─────────┘
it depends on what you mean by “corporate space”
end users of any type don’t use linux because of a mixture because that’s what they’re used to using; but end users can’t do shit w/o the service backbones which are dominated by linux and depended upon by end users.
anedotally: it works fine if it’s from a vendor who provides support for it. eg cumulus switches running fedora 9 but still getting updates from cumulus engineers.
🤞