[-] ubergeek77@lemmy.ubergeek77.chat 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Are there any "open" solutions to mesh networking that can compare to TP-Link Omada? I don't think any open source hardware or software can come close, especially not for the newer Wi-Fi standards.

I haven't bought them yet, but I'm seriously thinking about some Omadas. I imagine I can prevent them from phoning home, and the management software can run locally in a Docker container. Running it like that would be good enough for me even though they're not "open."

I'm planning a rework of my home Wi-Fi, and my current plan is an OPNsense box from Protectli, and a few EAP772's:

https://www.tp-link.com/us/business-networking/omada-wifi-ceiling-mount/eap772/

If there's something comparable/better that's more of an open ecosystem, you definitely have my attention while I'm shopping around for different options.

[-] ubergeek77@lemmy.ubergeek77.chat 3 points 3 months ago

Definitely recommend Motrix:

https://motrix.app/

If the Google download link supports it, it should be fairly resistant to interruptions. If it doesn't, this might not help much, but you should still use this instead of just a browser.

I haven't tried to download a Google takeout, so you might need to get clever with how you add the download link to it.

If you just can't get it to work, you can try getting the browser extension to automatically send all downloads to Motrix. There is some setup required, though:

https://github.com/gautamkrishnar/motrix-webextension

Good luck!

[-] ubergeek77@lemmy.ubergeek77.chat 3 points 10 months ago

It is. The user just won't see any content from the server they blocked.

[-] ubergeek77@lemmy.ubergeek77.chat 3 points 11 months ago

Look at the build I linked in my issue there. You will see an artifacts page where you can download a working build as a zip. You need to be logged in to GitHub to see the download link.

But like I said, Zygisk is still pretty broken even with that build. You'll get "further," but I wouldn't recommend running it as a daily driver.

No one has any clue when 27 is coming. I just know 26.4 was the last 26.x build.

More like guesswork/assumptions than reality

Sorry to be blunt, but you're not a developer and it shows. Android's build system was purpose made to be reproducible. Electron was not.

There is so much going on in an Electron build, most of which is out of Signal's control unless they maintain an entire fork of the Electron build stack. That is an enormous engineering effort for basically zero benefit.

It probably is functionally reproducible, apart from checksums differing due to build dates baked into the artifacts somewhere. It's not as easy as you think.

If you think it's as easy as "building it in a Docker container," then by all means, try.

Neither of those are issues:

  • Both Investigations games had HD mobile ports that already had redrawn/upscaled visuals. They look really good.
  • They would need to translate AAI2, but localizing a previously fan translated game is not unprecedented, they did it with GAA.

Wow that guy was kinda a dick

I really thought this was satire until your comment.

Who thought this was a good idea to publish...

I've seen people have similar issues on my issue tracker. Turns out it was caused by Cloudflare's JS minimization or rocket-loader being enabled. Something changed in 0.18.3 that made it incompatible with those Cloudflare features. If you use the Cloudflare proxy to serve your site, you will need to turn those off.

It's pretty hard to break out of Docker unless the user does something stupid, like mount the host's Docker socket into the container.

Casual container breakouts are not common at all, they're a big deal, and fixed pretty quickly.

We just need to find a librarian. Then they can access the secret network of librarians and ask about this story. We'll know what the tale was within 2 hours.

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ubergeek77

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