Like 3 days, lol
Like 3 days, lol
The waves are canceled (i.e. gone) until something goes wrong. You could end up accidentally causing constructive interference, in which case you my double the sound’s amplitude.
A pretty limited subset right now, but it has the most important ones.
When in doubt, assume that it probably does. Use Wireshark to find all outbound traffic from your Lorex devices, and see what they’re talking to. There’s a good chance that they’re, at a minimum, fetching the time from an NTP server.
I personally use Amcrest + Home Assistant behind a firewall, but that’s far from perfect. I’ve been interested in the new Amazon Blink cameras too, since they support self hosting (at least in some capacity). Still a bit iffy about them though, for obvious reasons.
If communism falls apart every time something doesn’t go according to plan, then it’s not going to work.
Lol, reality doesn’t matter
Very misleading title. Apparently floating an idea is now committing to implement a policy.
Like with a cloth or something?
Companies are only allowed to operate within a given state if they comply with the laws, so a company unwilling to play by the rules will be committing financial suicide by losing business opportunities in the biggest tech industry state.
Food for thought: Is it truly capitalism if random companies aren’t allowed to freely manufacture spare parts?
This smells more like government-granted monopolies than capitalism.
Agreed. I have a personal modem and a separate router with openwrt acting, at least in part, as a firewall. Then each host also has its own firewall for extra protection.
Yeah, this is a weird one in my opinion. I don’t like either option, but I guess if they told the malware to effectively self destruct, then IMO that’s okay, with the caveat that the FBI leaves some indicator behind that allows users to know that this happened on their machine.
Maybe consider routing your traffic through an SSH tunnel?
My gas fireplace works great in a power outage, as do my stove and grill. Just because a subset of gas-powered appliances don’t work doesn’t mean none of them work.
That’s great, but fossil fuels are often available in the event of a power outage, and that can save lives during a winter storm. Availability is just as important as efficiency, and until we can make our power grid more resilient, we need to factor that in.
They’ll just bake that logic into the printer directly
We had net neutrality before under the Democrats
We literally didn’t. The rules never took effect.
Yep, two sides of the same coin.
I’m going to cast another vote for a reverse proxy, such as NginxProxyManager. It’s really easy to set everything up, and they’re usually very easy to run in Docker/Podman.
One thing to note: if you end up with a domain with mandatory HSTS, you’ll have to use DNS-based certificate generation rather than HTTP based, since unencrypted HTTP is blocked (chicken/egg problem to get HTTPS working). It’s not hard, but you have to be aware of that limitation.