Vanced got taken down due to trademark violations.
They need something more substantial for revanced. Especially since it's only a set of binary patches and there is no redistribution of YT source code.
Vanced got taken down due to trademark violations.
They need something more substantial for revanced. Especially since it's only a set of binary patches and there is no redistribution of YT source code.
Oh God. Did the kettle boil over?
Has anyone followed standards properly? There are weird workarounds in Linux's TCP implementation because they had to do the same non-standard workarounds as BSD which was added since there are too many buggy TCP implementations out there that will break if the RFC is followed to the letter...
The Mobile port for Final Fantasy Tactics is still superb. The UI is a bit outdated but the strategy game itself is not.
20 Gig is nowhere near what most current cloud data centers are using. Most existing infra have at least at 100Gbps NICs. State of the art right now is 800Gbps. Your 20Gbps enterprise server might be enough for bare-metal AD, but if you include us-tail latency network storage and all the other fancy stuff you'll need way more than that. Doubly more so for HPC, ML and other data heavy workloads. Existing links can already see multi-terabit of aggregate throughput, it wouldn't be surprising if someone decided to have a bunch of HD cameras, streaming, torrenting, etc at their house generating traffic 24/7 because someone thought it was a fun thing to do.
For the gateway switch power draw, I can think of an off-the-shelf software switching solution at 75w, and that's for 100Gbps. A 20Gbps ASIC switch would be a lot less power hungry than that. If you're willing to go experimental, here's a theoretical 400Gbps SmartNIC design that runs at 7w, all you need to do is write a basic L3 switching program with NAT and it should all work.
There are more places where bandwidth is a bottleneck now than 10 years ago.
NIC speeds have gone from 100Gbps to 800Gbps in the last few years while PCIe and DRAM speeds have nowhere increased that much. No way are you going to push all that data through to the CPU on time. Bandwidth is the bottleneck these days and will continue to be a huge issue for the foreseeable future.
Life sure is harder for vampires these days. Not only do you have to worry about garlic and stakes, but there's also running tap water, concentrated solar energy, and Nvidia drivers going full brightness...
I might switch to it once bitwarden support comes out.
Worst case I lose my Google account. Which I only use for Android (no sync, no mail, no purchases)
Best case, Google no longer defaults to mobile 2fa and finally accepts i want to use totp every time.
Also, how would the biometrics requirement work if all im doing is storing the whole thing in a Bitwarden vault?
Is this an exclusively US thing? Back when I was in Asia there were always subtitled showings and non-subtitled showings. The better theaters even had a dedicated teleprompter at the bottom so the subtitles don't block the movie.
Leaks also show why the Titanic sank
CrowdSec has completely replaced fail2ban for me. It's a bit harder to setup but it's way more flexible with bans/statistics/etc. Also uses less ram.
It's also fun to watch the ban counter go up for things that I would never think about configuring on fail2ban, such as nginx CVEs.
Edit: fixed url. Oops!
Oh nice! A new tool! Do you happen to know how this compares to win10privacy?