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There was this: https://www.servethehome.com/insane-48-port-2-5gbe-2x-25gbe-...

But I have not been able to find a place to buy one.


A HRV or ERV, depending on how humid it is where you live will help immensely. Unfortunately hard to retrofit into existing construction.


This is really easy, just use Linux.


Easy unless web services start requiring you to use TPM or other things that limit your possibilities further


"German pharmaceutical firm Bayer was forced to give up its rights to the Aspirin trademark in the Treaty of Versailles, in 1919, which followed its defeat in World War One (it also lost the rights to Heroin, but in hindsight it's probably not so upset about that).

The punishment only applied to aspirin's use in victor nations the USA, UK and France, leaving Bayer's trademark still enforceable elsewhere."

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-27026704


“Elsewhere” being literally meaning else where. I wasn’t alive in 1919, though my understanding from the literature is that “the American public didn’t like the German”. Like how they didn’t like the Irish before that. Then how they don’t like the Japanese in 1940s, the north Koran in 1956, then the Vietnamese in 1950-60s, then the Arabs in the 1970s-2000s, then the Chinese in the 2010s-today.


> In other words, homeostatic feedback causes salt consumption to stay about the same by increased consumption of salty-tasting processed food.

I'd imagine that McDonalds/Wendys/etc don't view that as a bad thing...


> want to play around with scraping LLDP data but our switch software stack has a bug

It's written for Cumulus Linux, but it should be adaptable to other NOSes with some work: https://github.com/CumulusNetworks/ptm

You give it a graphviz dot file, and it uses LLDP to ensure that reality matches that file.


If the monitors are 3ft away from the musician, they're already looking at 3ms of latency just in the air between the monitor and their ear.


This is why you see headphones used in recording studios I’m sure.


You see headphones used in recording studios because ambient sound (i.e. from a loudspeaker) has a habit of getting picked up by microphones.


320x200 at 256 colors. X doesn't support any depth lower than 8bit, so VGA 640x480 wouldn't work.


X absolutely supports depths of 1 and 4 bits per pixel, along with 8bpp, with its VGA server: https://www.xfree86.org/4.8.0/vga.4.html


Thanks for the correction.

I hadn't thought of 1bpp because it isn't interesting on VGA hardware. But you're absolutely right about 4bpp having been a thing.


X does, modern X apps may not.


I remember that Xfree86 allowed 1 bit (B&W) modes


I'm on Debian stable, not OpenBSD, but SpamAssassin + razor + pyzor works really well. Roughly 1 spam per month, and 1-2 false positives a year. This is for an email address that has been used and openly spread widely for 25+ years.

The real work is making sure that outbound mail gets delivered, but even that is just making sure you have a clean IP and setting up reverse DNS + DMARC/SPF/DKIM...


Nice never heard of those until now. Link for anyone here cause it's kinda hard to google razor email filter for some reason. What does that setup have over amavisd?

https://notes.sagredo.eu/en/qmail-notes-185/razor2-pyzor-spa...

I investigated further and these don't really seem to be incredibly active projects, you sure this is the best solution?

https://github.com/toddr/Razor2-Client-Agent

https://github.com/SpamExperts/pyzor/tree/release-1-0-0


> you sure this is the best solution?

No, but I've been using it without issues for close to 25 years.


Love hearing when old code does just fine after that much years to be honest. Very impressive


To send an outbound email today you must have a special skill set and years of carefully built reputation. I just outsource it to smtp2go.


I understand and respect this opinion, but it is clearly not true that you need "years of carefully built reputation" as per my own write up in this thread and plenty of others here and elsewhere. Still, I do respect and understand that e-mail is a particularly nasty hole to dive into with potentially serious consequences so I do not look down on those that bow out and go for alternative solutions.


Apple's search is Google search. Google pays Apple $20 billion a year for that.


He means the top part above Google suggestions. If you type a url or company name Apple sometimes guesses the url and provides a direct link. Google not involved there - only if you click a Google suggestion or hit search/enter or whatever


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