

It’s no longer accessible from a desktop, only from the Google Maps app.
It’s no longer accessible from a desktop, only from the Google Maps app.
Yeah- Square and level are two different things. I can get a cube and rotate it any way, opposite faces will still be square to each other (technically parallel) despite not being level.
Interestingly, two perfectly vertical walls cannot be square to each other.
The router is set as a subnet router, that is how I am able to access other machines on my lan remotely.
I don’t want to, and sometimes can’t, install tailscale on every device I want remote access to.
So I may have duplicate routes- Does that explain the behaviour in my original post? And how would I go about avoiding that?
I could turn off subnet routing, and only turn it on when needed, but I’ll be putting up a bunch of other services that will want to talk to each other- I’m assuming this will break whenever I turn subnet routing on.
I kind of follow what you’re putting down.
I am not using an exit node. How do I go about splitting my routes?
What I want to achieve is ‘normal’ access for within the lan, as well as remote access over tailscale for things I cannot run tailscale on.
I have a commercial VPN, but I am not connected. What tinkering did you have to do?
I set up subnet advertisements by doing tailscale set --advertise-routes=192.168.1.0/24
. I did not touch ACL.
The home PC is Windows, the context menu for the tray app give the option to ‘use tailscale subnets’ which is enabled- I assume this is the equivalent of accepting advertised routes.
From the home PC, tailscale ping 192.168.1.2 returns a pong, from the tailscale IP. tracert fails.
Linux newb here. What does this mean? My knowledge of systemd is that it is responsible for things like mounting disks and running networking. So does this mean I can ask systemd to grab a new IP address every x hours, even if the machine is asleep?
You’ve got a shelf full of fifty boxes. Forty five of them are sold. You’ve got five people working in the store across three registers. You want to make sure that the people who ordered one get one, so you pre-allocate them by printing out all the orders and attaching them to the box.
The fact they did do all that is what makes this so amazing. The edges of the eyes is what convinced me it’s not a photo.
Minecraft is secretly bringing metric to the next generation.
I’m just going to start saying ‘blocks’ instead of metres to the youth from now on. I’ll get them used to it, then casually mention ‘kiloblocks’ one day and watch their face as they realise.
My response is similar, usually the good old ‘Do you shut the door when you shit?’.
When we start getting specific, I’ll often try and frame data harvesting in a much more visceral way. If they say they don’t care that xyz keeps track of everyone they talk to, I ask them to imagine an actual person standing behind them, making notes on a clipboard about every interaction they have with someone, and how that would make them feel.
The natural extension of this is that everyone should live in one big megacity. Is this what you want?
My understanding is that cookies were generally just used as a fingerprint- it’s just a unique ID that is used to tie your device to their database, which is where the information is kept.
Is there a name for this genre of overcooked-like? Chaos management? Yelling at your friends? Divorce simulator?
That’s very clear, thanks.
I’m guessing you’d have to search the database to make the index, right? To search for ‘gazter’ you’d have had to go over the whole dataset and assigned each entry with a starting letter value, and so on?
Largely ignorant, but data-curious person here.
…what?
I’ve got the fourth Sharma, I used points to get a large Austrian man to walk over the left side of my body.
Galene is webRTC based, but very lightweight.
Ghost Love Score, the live at Wacken version, is top tier material.
Give me 2, but less mirrors- I’ve spent enough time in hotel lobbies, thank you. But if it were more theatre lobby than hotel lobby, I’m all for it.