Another tip for public wifi is to use OpenVPN over tcp/443 as an exit node to route any traffic you like. Obviously you should always be using a VPN on an untrusted network but this way you can bypass all content/media…
I believe the main concern here, from dealing with clients that have mandated no PII in logs, is both authorisation as well as control. If it’s in your service logs, then it could be in your Splunk logs, it could be in…
This post has triggered my PTSD. I had Dell tell me that their only monitors which were compatible with Macs were AUD$1000k+ each, and Apple tell me that the only monitors compatible with them were available from the…
I use Jira, though rarely interact with it via the web interface or board. I assign due dates to most tasks (only the least important tasks don’t get a date - and I never get to those) and then I use some custom…
Only the real hackers post to HN using paper and pen.
My MacOS productivity tools include: alfred (as someone already said), rectangle, bartender (essential for me since getting a notched MacBook), xbar (if you want easy access to custom info/bash scripts in the menu bar),…
Rectangle is a free and similar app.
Another tip for public wifi is to use OpenVPN over tcp/443 as an exit node to route any traffic you like. Obviously you should always be using a VPN on an untrusted network but this way you can bypass all content/media…
I believe the main concern here, from dealing with clients that have mandated no PII in logs, is both authorisation as well as control. If it’s in your service logs, then it could be in your Splunk logs, it could be in…
This post has triggered my PTSD. I had Dell tell me that their only monitors which were compatible with Macs were AUD$1000k+ each, and Apple tell me that the only monitors compatible with them were available from the…
I use Jira, though rarely interact with it via the web interface or board. I assign due dates to most tasks (only the least important tasks don’t get a date - and I never get to those) and then I use some custom…
Only the real hackers post to HN using paper and pen.
My MacOS productivity tools include: alfred (as someone already said), rectangle, bartender (essential for me since getting a notched MacBook), xbar (if you want easy access to custom info/bash scripts in the menu bar),…
Rectangle is a free and similar app.