Is it really that popular nowadays? How many folks still use a tunnel broker at all in 2026?
That sentence in the article almost reads as if it's missing a crucial word ("not"). Did Debian indeed decide to go with Netplan?
It's ashame that MythWeb isn't under active development anymore[0]. The MythWeb change log in the 0.33 release doesn't have any commits newer than June 4, 2022. Maybe I'm weird but I use MythWeb exclusively even though…
I thought this, too, but it seems carriers in the USA are being /very/ selective about where they offer the service. For example, my inlaws live in semi-rural South Carolina and a new cell tower was built about a mile…
Maybe they /want/ to see some increase in attrition due to the uncertainty. It's a very rough way of going about that, though.
> You don't get rewarded for preventing bad things. A few years ago I saw a promotion announcement e-mail come into my inbox for a colleague who sat a few steps from my desk. It was filled with the usual "did this, did…
FWIW, when I lived in Seattle I found that Lumen's DSL service blocked it as well. It wasn't an obvious block, though. It was either some DPI or size-based filtering. I wrote it up here for posterity:…
I always figured that 4-digit and 5-digit ASNs were "cool" to a certain crowd but seeing them at the bottom of this auction page just seems like lunacy. Sure, IPv4 blocks have reputation but I've never heard of the…
They had a release earlier so, no? https://mplayerhq.hu/design7/news.html I don't think it's under as much active development as it was 10-15 years ago, though.
I honed on this as well. I can't speak much to running FreeBSD as a server, but can say that using it as a router is not a great experience compared to Linux. I can't even get the latest ECMP (ROUTE_MPATH) feature…
This post makes me want to roll my own Linux kernel again. I used to build vanilla kernels on Slackware (2.2.x!) and then Gentoo a /long/ time ago as well as modify stock Debian kernels to remove stuff I didn't need and…
FWIW, the first bullet mentions lifecycle rules: "This action creates a copy of the object with updated settings and a new last-modified date. You can change the storage class without making a new copy of the object…
Is it really that popular nowadays? How many folks still use a tunnel broker at all in 2026?
That sentence in the article almost reads as if it's missing a crucial word ("not"). Did Debian indeed decide to go with Netplan?
It's ashame that MythWeb isn't under active development anymore[0]. The MythWeb change log in the 0.33 release doesn't have any commits newer than June 4, 2022. Maybe I'm weird but I use MythWeb exclusively even though…
I thought this, too, but it seems carriers in the USA are being /very/ selective about where they offer the service. For example, my inlaws live in semi-rural South Carolina and a new cell tower was built about a mile…
Maybe they /want/ to see some increase in attrition due to the uncertainty. It's a very rough way of going about that, though.
> You don't get rewarded for preventing bad things. A few years ago I saw a promotion announcement e-mail come into my inbox for a colleague who sat a few steps from my desk. It was filled with the usual "did this, did…
FWIW, when I lived in Seattle I found that Lumen's DSL service blocked it as well. It wasn't an obvious block, though. It was either some DPI or size-based filtering. I wrote it up here for posterity:…
I always figured that 4-digit and 5-digit ASNs were "cool" to a certain crowd but seeing them at the bottom of this auction page just seems like lunacy. Sure, IPv4 blocks have reputation but I've never heard of the…
They had a release earlier so, no? https://mplayerhq.hu/design7/news.html I don't think it's under as much active development as it was 10-15 years ago, though.
I honed on this as well. I can't speak much to running FreeBSD as a server, but can say that using it as a router is not a great experience compared to Linux. I can't even get the latest ECMP (ROUTE_MPATH) feature…
This post makes me want to roll my own Linux kernel again. I used to build vanilla kernels on Slackware (2.2.x!) and then Gentoo a /long/ time ago as well as modify stock Debian kernels to remove stuff I didn't need and…
FWIW, the first bullet mentions lifecycle rules: "This action creates a copy of the object with updated settings and a new last-modified date. You can change the storage class without making a new copy of the object…