

Well, they consider the old testament the fundamentals.
Well, they consider the old testament the fundamentals.
Thank you for this. I’ve been struggling to get wireguard running in hotio containers on my Synology, and this looks like it might be what I need.
Edit: it worked! Had to fiddle around with it because it didn’t like multiple containers in one compose yaml
Well, yeah, but in this case you’d be selling it to someone who will fix it.
That thing was a Ford fluke. I drove mine 20k miles after I got it without charging the oil, and it never complained. The fucker actually got more fuel efficient the longer I drove it. Ended up somewhere like 32 city.
I miss it
It’s not a bad analogy, you’re just not understanding the core concept that a higher power interfering is different than interpersonal interactions.
One thing to keep in mind is that the used car market is fucked right now because of the tariffs. You’re going to pay a premium for any used car from a dealership for the next long while.
My advice? Get a gray title on the car and sell it to someone who will fix it up. I hit a deer with my old 99 contour, and the insurance adjuster totaled it because my back seat was messy (I wouldn’t have believed it if he hadn’t said it to my face; the whole story is a trip). They gave us $2400 for it, we kept the car, and sold it to a family friend for $1200 because it just needed new headlight assemblies. We only paid $1200 for it in the first place, but my step dad knew the dealer and got it for what he paid.
That’s only liability insurance, though.
It might be worth it if you have a Jeep for the glass replacement alone, though
Maybe it’ll help to think about it in terms of an experiment. God is the scientist and humans are the test subjects. If the scientist interferes with the test subjects, the data loses meaning, but if the test subjects interfere with each other it’s just part of the experiment.
Basically: supreme authority interfering = bad.
I’m not sure what you’re talking about. Looking up camping tents, the vast majority have the classic pitched rain fly.
But regardless, that style of rain fly is pretty new, so it’s irrelevant to the reason they were named flies in the first place. I doubt it was common for tents to even have zippers when the term rain fly was coined.
Edit: Looking into it further, the term rain fly was coined before the term fly was used to describe the fabric covering the zipper. It looks like calling the fabric covering the zipper a fly came from using fly to describe the fabric covering a tent.
The piece of fabric covering the zipper.
If I wasn’t dressing for others I’d be naked like 90% of the time.
Most rain flies don’t have zippers, though. They’re basically the tent’s umbrella.
Did you miss what community you’re in?
It’s like the difference between the government punishing you for free speech and a Lemmy mod banning you.
It still doesn’t matter. Unless you specifically set up a separate network, everything will be in the same network.
Especially if you don’t statically assign your IPs.
Your stated use case doesn’t really require any special routing.
I use that time to rinse off my flipflops.
Because best practices for connecting an unsupported operating system to the Internet are to not do it.
Even if the OS is safe on the day support ends, a critical vulnerability might be found just a few days later. It’s also possible that an exploit has already been found that the bad actor is sitting on it until support ends.
Even if that doesn’t happen, software developers are going to drop support for the OS and vulnerabilities found in those applications could be used to gain ingress.
No amount of “being careful using the Internet” is going to prevent hacking if the system has exploits. If you context a fresh install of XP to the Internet, your system will be compromised in a matter of minutes.
Our infrastructure has been in desperate need for repair and replacement for decades now