[-] CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 week ago

Pretty sure the legitimate campaign spending wasn't what he was referring too.

The propaganda machine was also being funded by international entities (e.g. Tim Pool being paid by Russian state media employees).

[-] CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 month ago

Pretty sure most hosting platforms have egress costs on their cheaper VM instances.

I know Google cloud charges for bandwidth to AUS, and Oracle is 10TB of egress per month before charging (which I think is the most generous of free/cheap hosting platforms).

[-] CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 7 months ago

+1 for Mikrotik.

Get one of their routers that have an Arm or x86 processor and you can run PiHole and a DDNS updater on there as containers. Wireguard support (client and server) is built in.

Even their cheapest hardware that runs routerOS has access to all the same features as their enterprise level gear.

[-] CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 8 months ago

Every time I see a Kia Soul in my rearview I know they're going to be tailgating like an asshole and using turn lanes to pass traffic.

[-] CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 8 months ago

I use an S-Biner keychain. https://a.co/d/7nuHlqm

Let's you take you're yubikey or thumb drive off your keychain eff effectively infinitely without it wearing out.

[-] CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 10 months ago

^ Your M365 admin needs to know where to manage the specific authentication methods and be sure to disable MS auth rollouts. By default right now, authentication rollouts are enabled on all tenants with P1 licensing or above, and it only supports the MS Authenticator app.

Once that rollout is disabled, the authentication methods your admin has made available to you will actually work properly.

[-] CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 10 months ago

The Oracle Cloud VPS only has SSH key authentication enabled by default. You can also set it to only allow SSH from your home IP in the virtual firewall before the machine is ever spun up.

Their current free ARM offering is 1 machine with 4-cores and 24gb RAM for life. You can also add another 2 AMD machines with 1-core and 1gb RAM and still be in their free-tier.

If you're going to set it up and take advantage of the ARM machine, make sure you pick a home location for your account that has multiple availability zones. San Fran right now only has 1 zone, so if the shared ARM instances are all used up, you'll have to wait a few days and try again. Phoenix I think has 3, so you can try with another zone right away.

[-] CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 year ago

Edge/IE run some underlying services for built-in windows features, so uninstalling them can cause issues with completely different parts of the OS.

Ran into an issue with a client still running Office 2016 where uninstalling IE11 prevented them from opening any links within those apps. Office was harcoded to look at IE for link handling and didn't respect the setting for your default browser.

[-] CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 year ago

For sure iRST. Will sometimes need the chipset driver to detect the SSD/HDD during install when that's enabled.

[-] CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 1 year ago

400 hours in and I'm not even really at endgame content. 10/10 would recommend the space ninja game.

[-] CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 year ago

Using a Pi3b to run AdGuard Home and a TailScale subnet router.

I've got another Pi3b running Octoprint/Klipper for a 3d printer, but I'm currently migrating that to Mainsail running on an old SFF PC so I can run multiple printers with Klipper off the same PC.

The rest of my stack is on an actual server running UnRaid with like 50tb raw storage.

I will say that TailScale has been annoying asf with their subnet router setup not actually forcing the correct DNS for AdGuard Home so I can have ad-blocking while away from home. I had to move back to a pure Wireguard setup directly on my router for DNS to work properly.

[-] CoopaLoopa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Docker containers running the -arrs and Plex live on the SSDs so they load faster. Downloads are cached to SSDs so that read/write speed isn't a limit when lots of downloads are running simultaneously. The downloads then get moved to a spinning disk array for long term storage whenever Unraid runs it's 'mover' operation.

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CoopaLoopa

joined 1 year ago