Yes. Mediatek SoCs have hardware acceleration support for that. https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/drivers/net/et...
Doesn't seem like they are digitising the media.
I read somewhere about a home router that corrupted packets in transit. In this case it was a torrent that never completed because of this. IIRC something in the nat engine bugged out and replaced bytes in the data and…
MAP-T/MAP-E moves the CG-NAT functionality to the CPE. 60x users per IPv4 address should be doable.
Well I think this falls right into the anti-competitive argument. With the option of booting unsigned code the platform is available for anyone. Microsoft did sign boot loaders so linux can boot, there would have been…
Broadcom arm-based devices should have it.
Yes, the clip-on adapter could not power the chip in-circuit. So I use the power from the board. As I said this worked fine on some boards but not others.
I never got a clip-on adapter working on later generation Broadcom devices. On previous ones I shorted the cs-pin to make the nand chip disappear from the SoC. Then you could flash the chip.
Arm based devices have an early boot menu accessible by holding the "a" button. From here boot with fail-safe defaults.
Yes. Mediatek SoCs have hardware acceleration support for that. https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/drivers/net/et...
Doesn't seem like they are digitising the media.
I read somewhere about a home router that corrupted packets in transit. In this case it was a torrent that never completed because of this. IIRC something in the nat engine bugged out and replaced bytes in the data and…
MAP-T/MAP-E moves the CG-NAT functionality to the CPE. 60x users per IPv4 address should be doable.
Well I think this falls right into the anti-competitive argument. With the option of booting unsigned code the platform is available for anyone. Microsoft did sign boot loaders so linux can boot, there would have been…
Broadcom arm-based devices should have it.
Yes, the clip-on adapter could not power the chip in-circuit. So I use the power from the board. As I said this worked fine on some boards but not others.
I never got a clip-on adapter working on later generation Broadcom devices. On previous ones I shorted the cs-pin to make the nand chip disappear from the SoC. Then you could flash the chip.
Arm based devices have an early boot menu accessible by holding the "a" button. From here boot with fail-safe defaults.