Annoying how it doesn't disable the cell modem from registering to a network (in Canada). So no it doesn't provide any tracking protection. Or at least that is how it sounds.
I believe WOL brings it down to 10Mbit - at which point it'll process any received packets use a low power processor. Packets wouldn't be routed to it unless specifically addressed
ZFS supports instant resizing of datasets. When that dataset is the virtual disk for a VM you can just increase its size on the hypervisor, then it's a simple growfs operation for the VM to see the increased size. On LXC the dataset is usually mounted directly so the resize operation is reflected immediately.
I use Proxmox as the hypervisor, and the ZFS resize part is supported on the GUI and it's trivial to use. Let me know if you need more details.
I can't tell if you're being sarcastic, but assuming you're not: Tailscale makes security easier because networks are private by default. To achieve a similar effect with Yggdrasil you'd have to use a firewall to whitelist the Yggdrasil IPs of all your devices. So it's more work to set up.
Huh? I thought one of the appeals of Tailscale is that security is done at the network level; plus that your network is private, so you don't get randos knocking at your ports.
Anyway; Tailscale is not your only network. If you’re on a laptop, you need to be able to log onto rando wifi networks. If you’re at home, you need to be mindful of your smart fridge going rogue. You need to run a firewall. Tailscale adds a separate, Tailscale-specific, firewall with centralized management. Now you have two firewalls.
Another falsehood programmers believe about time. A stopped clock is only right twice a day if it is a 12 hour clock and only if it’s not set at a leap second or at a skipped time during the shift from standard to daylight time.
Haven't met him personally, but it's nice to hear he's as regionally popular as he is. I'm just going off the fact I've seen him around and he's often documenting nearby streets. It's good stuff and super informative.
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