It might be a little sketchy for some, but you can patch the .iso to remove the TPM requirement and get Windows 11 to install on non-compliant computers. I forgot where to download the patch from, it was from some…
I like TreeBird's floss. They have silk and bamboo/charcoal kinds. They are very affordable, IMO. I buy their bamboo/charcoal refill pack for $18 and it lasts me a long time. I floss everyday and I use excessive yardage…
A warning though, water won't 100% wash away any scum. I recall reading an article somewhere saying that dentists still recommends conventional floss once in a while to remove any stubborn scum if you're using Waterpik.…
going slightly off the tangent here, does FaaS cloud providers like AWS, CloudFlare, and etc support SSEs? Last time I checked, they don't really support it.
In my case with this load balancer, I think it's just badly written. I think it is set to hold ALL data until the server ends the connection. I have tried leaving my SSE open to send over a few megabytes worth of data…
The part where it says: > SSE works seamlessly with existing HTTP infrastructure: I'd be careful with that assumption. I have tried using SSE through some 3rd party load balancer at my work and it doesn't work that…
It might be a little sketchy for some, but you can patch the .iso to remove the TPM requirement and get Windows 11 to install on non-compliant computers. I forgot where to download the patch from, it was from some…
I like TreeBird's floss. They have silk and bamboo/charcoal kinds. They are very affordable, IMO. I buy their bamboo/charcoal refill pack for $18 and it lasts me a long time. I floss everyday and I use excessive yardage…
A warning though, water won't 100% wash away any scum. I recall reading an article somewhere saying that dentists still recommends conventional floss once in a while to remove any stubborn scum if you're using Waterpik.…
going slightly off the tangent here, does FaaS cloud providers like AWS, CloudFlare, and etc support SSEs? Last time I checked, they don't really support it.
In my case with this load balancer, I think it's just badly written. I think it is set to hold ALL data until the server ends the connection. I have tried leaving my SSE open to send over a few megabytes worth of data…
The part where it says: > SSE works seamlessly with existing HTTP infrastructure: I'd be careful with that assumption. I have tried using SSE through some 3rd party load balancer at my work and it doesn't work that…