Some enterprise grade stuff still use BIOS. But I haven’t messed with one for over 6 years
Some enterprise grade stuff still use BIOS. But I haven’t messed with one for over 6 years
Raw files from cameras have meta data that tells raw converters the info of which color profile and lenses it’s taken with, but any camera worth using professionally doesn’t have any native corrections on raw files. However, in special cases as with lenses with high distortion, the raw files have a distortion profile on by default.
I’m a network engineer, I always have a flashlight on me since I have to get into crawl ways to chase cables
I personally have an Acebeam E70 Mini because it’s high CRI and non-PWM.
PiHole and then Minecraft actually all through CLI.
Imagine my shock once I found out about screen and SSH. I didn’t need to walk back and forth between my computer and the server.
I didn’t touch a GUI for about 4 years.
That’s not how PKI works?
Unless you know how digital signatures work better than me
Unless bitlocker is enabled by default, which is becoming more and more common unfortunately…
DDG proxy here I come
Cries in SFFPCs
Hard to tame a 5800X3D in a 8L case
Yes depending on the sleep state. Also some power is going to ram to keep it alive. I think for framework it’s in the realm of 5% an hour or something like that.
I usually go the hibernation route.
Desktops I sleep to ram, laptops I hibernate to the SSD.
Ethernet is a layer 1/2 standard, so it is technically it’s anything covered under IEEE 802.3.
But for most folks Ethernet is a copper patch cable and a copper port.
My comment was more directed at the unholy costs of copper SFPs and their heat when dealing with multigig setups.
I run fiber because fiber SFPs are cheaper than copper lol.
But if it doesn’t move in my house, it’s wired.
I’d say it’s more effective to snap a photo and upload it right away to social media than it is to take a photo, download it on an app, then upload it to social media.
Unless the shelter has a dedicated social media team, DSLRs or mirrorless would be overkill for the average person.
I use a framework for my laptop. I brought my own ram and storage.
That’s also assuming they used proper salts and a strong hashing algorithm.
Also MITM and or phishing attacks are not super common but can also depreciate your common password very quickly.
Always layered defense. If it’s not 1 thing, it could be another.
Unique passwords are just one facet on a multi-layered security defense.
I have horrible errors in my ZFS pools until I did a memtest. Fixing my ram eliminated all the errors.
Adguard is a little more refined imho.
Ran pinhole for ages and used scripts to update it.
Adguard, everything is built into the UI. Although custom rules for certain clients are a little hard in Adguard.
Now I have a dual system.
Adguard is a secondary and DoH as my primary. That way I have DNS services regardless of if the internet is up or down.
Backblaze
I also have my 160tb home server for anything not vital.
All of my printers are on a VLAN with a dead gateway.
LAN access only. And if it doesn’t work from day one on that dead VLAN, then I return it.
I only really listen to them while driving 3+ hours.
My mind needs some engagement or I’ll fall asleep.
I listen to Dark Net Diaries because I’m interested in Cyber security, this American life because of the varied stories, wait wait don’t tell me because it’s light hearted, and car talk because of the nostalgia. I’m planning on grabbing a prairie home companion because my father listened to it, makes me think of him.
That being said. Dark Net is becoming a little more dramatic than I’d like, but it’s still good content.