There's mull[1], which is based on LLVM toolchain and can accept any language that transforms into LLVM bytecode. SQLite[2] also does mutation testing, by compile and mutate generated assembly code. [1]:…
Seems Narrowlink is tunneling at socket level; while Tailscale is tunneling at network / IP level. I think they are comparing apple to orange here.
According to the blog[1], Tailscale currently have a relay network for relaying traffic when NAT traversal does not work. I wish one day Tailscale allows private relay server, for privacy and speed / latency reasons.…
But when I was working daily via a DaaS platform, it's not a great experience for software development. Input latency is high enough to be noticed, the virtual desktop can not put under load (e.g. using a IDE for C++…
They certainly can try, but major vendor will resist. Kazakhstan government has tried this method[1]. They sure can try sneaky ways, but any imported laptop connecting to hotel Wi-Fi could reveal it. [1]:…
There's mull[1], which is based on LLVM toolchain and can accept any language that transforms into LLVM bytecode. SQLite[2] also does mutation testing, by compile and mutate generated assembly code. [1]:…
Seems Narrowlink is tunneling at socket level; while Tailscale is tunneling at network / IP level. I think they are comparing apple to orange here.
According to the blog[1], Tailscale currently have a relay network for relaying traffic when NAT traversal does not work. I wish one day Tailscale allows private relay server, for privacy and speed / latency reasons.…
But when I was working daily via a DaaS platform, it's not a great experience for software development. Input latency is high enough to be noticed, the virtual desktop can not put under load (e.g. using a IDE for C++…
They certainly can try, but major vendor will resist. Kazakhstan government has tried this method[1]. They sure can try sneaky ways, but any imported laptop connecting to hotel Wi-Fi could reveal it. [1]:…