Oh, that’s why xcancel was returning 502
Oh, that’s why xcancel was returning 502
Yeah, of course, it would be better in many ways if the firmware wasn’t closed.
And runs with an USB cable flashing other peoples ESPs to ruin everyone’s day
Open source stack will not prevent this. It’s not even a backdoor, it’s functionality that these researches think should be hidden from programmers for whatever reason.
Open source devices would have this functionality readily available for programmers. Look at rtl-sdr, using the words of these researches, it has a “backdoor” where a TV dongle may be used to listen to garage key fobs gasp everyone panic now!
Looking it up and the ut’s all news like this:
NZBMatrix, a popular Usenet indexer, closed in 2012 due to a large takedown notice from Hollywood studios
Matrix? Are there some Matrix rooms with Linux ISO?
If you have a bit extra money, get a seedbox. Cheapest I’ve seen is €10/mo
If you happen to be on an IP address Google likes.
There always have been some sites blocking VPN traffic but it became widespread last 2-3 years.
What do your people ask then? “Does it come in red too?”
Unless you live a very dynamic lifestyle that requires your calendar to be 24/7 synced, you can just use whatever server software you like, make it listen in LAN only, and have your devices sync when they’re at home.
DecSyncCC and Syncthing is another option.
Oh there is a video. I instinctively scroll past these because they’re usually ads/spam. Alright, the video shows you need to copy some more magic strings, thanks.
Maybe use a filesystem and syncthing this way? https://github.com/39aldo39/DecSync
Or you could use the free tier of some PaaS like
https://render.com/docs/free if you prefer a traditional approach. Just remember to make backups, if it’s free it can disappear at any time.
Created a profile. Created a share link. Sent to a friend. Friend clicked the link.
What I expected: a chat will open What happened: we both were seeing the “connect peer” screen and nothing happened.
I’ve read the documentation that pops up and it doesn’t really describe what to do, just says that it uses webrtc and is nice and private.
Balls, said the Queen, if I had two I’d be a king!
If you remove the fishes, replece the cat with a baby, and add a dollar on a fishing hook, it’s literally the same.
HTTP/1.1+ broke the convenience of raw socket browsing!
Has there been any progress in self-hosting sync server since Mozilla abandoned the old version a few years ago and created a behemoth with some exotic database that requires lots of resources?
Yaaay!