- I can't simultaneously play a third MMO (already got FFXI and FFXIV)
- X4 custom start allows me to jump to the parts I want to play instantly, no matter if it's starting wars, flooding the market, dogfighting, etc
- My X4 save is a gzip file: no need to worry about latency after moving to another country etc (my EVE account is locked to a region halfway across the world)
- I don't have to wait for irl people to do something fun in X4
- The gziped save file is in xml format. If something breaks I can just fix it
- X4 has a huge modding scene for whatever features you want
- X4's modding tools are super easy to learn: it's all xml and lua. Took me only 2 hours to figure out how to modify the UI from scratch.
Base it off of total sqft?
I'm struggling to see how someone would need a combined 40000 sqft of residential living space either...
iirc the bad UA filter is bundled with either base-http-scenarios or nginx. That might help assuming they aren't trying to mask that UA.
Pretty sure expiry is handled by the local crowdsec daemon, so it should automatically revoke rules once a set time is reached.
At least that's the case with the iptables and nginx bouncers (4 hour ban for probing). I would assume that it's the same for the cloudflare one.
Alternatively, maybe look into running two bouncers (1 local, 1 CF)? The CF one filters out most bot traffic, and if some still get through then you block them locally?
To anyone who doesn't know who they are, here's a nice piece of investigative journalism about them: https://newrepublic.com/article/176811/united-daughters-confederacy-racist-ladies
Join us at !longreads@sh.itjust.works !
I'm familiar with the Apollo retro-reflectors. Though in all seriousness I doubt a laser would provide a substantial amount of power (unless you have a specialty designed energy collector like in RFID)
*stares at the intern's 400 line bash script*
There are totally more flexible options. Just don't mind the front falling off. It's totally normal!
Look at the line with the asm_exc_invalid_op. That seems like a hardware fault caused by an invalid asm instruction to me. Either something wrong is being interpreted as an opcode (unlikely) or maybe the driver was compiled with extensions not available on the current machine.
OP, how old is your CPU? And how old is the nic you are using?
Edit: ~~did you use a custom driver for the NIC? I'm looking at the Linux src and rt_mutex_schedule does not exist.~~ Nevermind. Was checking 4.18 instead of 6.7. found it now. The bug is most likely inside a macro called preempt_disable(). Unfortunately most of the functions are pretty heavily inlined and architecture dependent so you won't get much out of it. But it is likely any changes you made in terms of premption might also be causing the bug.
Right after they killed Book Depository? Wow they are getting rid of everything worth keeping...
Hmm... I need to test this out then. I have about 200+ entries across multiple folders, but I'm not seeing much of a slowdown. But then again most of my hardware is pretty good (except for one or two devices).
So does openbox /s
Why play chess with Moriarty when you can just bash him in the head with a chessboard?