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Oh for sure, but it’ll be easier to cable manage if it’s closer to the edge of the board like over by the 24-pin or something, which is probably the real W with this standard.
Oh for sure, but it’ll be easier to cable manage if it’s closer to the edge of the board like over by the 24-pin or something, which is probably the real W with this standard.
Not surprising tbh, loads of mid-range Android phones do that. They’ll implement USB4 in a year or 2 and maybe be the first to implement it in a phone, then talk the biggest game about it at their developer conference like they invented USB or something.
It’s pretty cyclical at this point, they’re saving a talking point for later
Wasn’t there a Tom Scott video about this concept a while ago? I can’t find it atm but I’m sure I’ve seen this one already
I hadn’t considered the proprietary nature of snaps when I decided I didn’t like them. I just figured out their startup activity was adding 5 seconds to a 10 second boot despite not having installed any snaps
It would come down to the specific DNS provider you’re using and what their GUI is like. in theory CNAMEs are dead simple though.
DNS names are just stored as text, so if you use tools like mxtoolbox you can see the DNS records for a given site. Following the standard text format, a CNAME formatted like below would create www.example.net that would use the IP address from www.example.com
www.example.net. CNAME www.example.com.
Look up Let’s Encrypt and their tool Certbot. They generate free https certs. Though I’m less sure about if you can use it on dyndns? You may need to buy a domain name and CNANE it to your dyndns name. I like nanecheap for domain names though if you’re new to the concept.
There’s a rabbit hole of consequences and alternatives to what I just wrote though. Does dyndns hide your home IP? I’m not sure tbh
The apparent size of the screen relative to your vision totally changes. Airplanes flying by in the sky look real small cause they’re real far
I don’t think it’s a far fetched statement, but I’m also not sure if it’s true.
I know concrete has a pretty big carbon footprint, but, I don’t know how that scales in relation to the carbon savings of nuclear power.