


Especially true for pregnant women.



Especially true for pregnant women.


Remember, Google is not alone:



Wasn’t Zelenskyy shopping for 100–150 Swedish JAS Gripen only a few weeks ago? Eager to modernize the air force with European planes, I guess.

To quote Indiana Jones: “This belongs into a museum.” Last blog post from 2013, download page updated 2015.


Some context and discussion here: https://mastodon.social/@Edent/115048990801167629


Would be nice if it supported more languages and layouts.


I had a very similar problem as @Toralv@lemmy.world a few weeks ago. I repurposed a small, fanless x86 desktop computer as my new router. It has only one RJ45 port and due to its small size cannot be extended with a proper network card. As it has an unused USB3 port, I acquired a cheap Realtek-based USB3-to-RJ45 ‘adapter’ as the second network interface. It works without any further issues in Linux (Arch) and has no problems to handle Gbps traffic.
For the router configuration, I am using ‘nftables’ instead of ‘iptables’, as the former is supposed the successor of the latter. I only used the new nftables configuration, but there are wrappers available so that one can continue to use iptables syntax if desired.
For network configuration, I am using systemd’s networkd. Check systemd.network(5): Configuration option ‘IPMasquerade’ takes care of telling nftables/iptables to setup masquerading (rendering the iptables invocation @thebardingreen@lemmy.starlightkel.xyz exemplified unnecessary), options ‘IPv4Forwarding’ and ‘IPv6Forwarding’ renders manually changing ‘/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward’ unnecessary.
systemd’s networkd has a built-in DHCP server; check option ‘DHCPServer’ and section ‘DHCPServer’ for that (same man page as above). This way you can skip installing/configuring a separate DHCP server, but systemd’s DHCP server has some limitations, such as only supporting DHCPv4 and lack of proper command line tools. For example, to retrieve the list of current leases, you would have to make a dbus call to networkd, e.g. via busctl or dbus-send.
Bridges can also be configured with systemd’s networkd, making a separate bridge tool unnecessary. Rather straight-forward with three small configuration files, telling networkd that you want to have a bridge, its name (e.g. br0), its MAC address, which NICs will be part of the bridge, and the bridge’s configuration like a NIC itself (e.g. static IP address, that the networkd’s DHCP server shall listen here, …).


Sounds like gagh.


Dropbox seems to be different than other companies. It is known to have migrated back from AWS to their own infrastructure at a time when ever other CEO was propagating to migrate into the cloud. Article is from 2019, though: https://techcrunch.com/2019/06/21/three-years-after-moving-off-aws-dropbox-infrastructure-continues-to-evolve/
Things had “2000” in their names to make them sound cool or futuristic, like Video 2000 or Windows 2000.
Finally! Do you have an idea how expensive those things are and how much my wage slaves must work for that?