

So… nobody changes the default settings, therefore everyone should change the default settings… to the wrong option?
edit: Why is it that homo sapiens is always willing to go an extra mile just to hurt itself?
Global namespace extremist. Defragment your communities!


So… nobody changes the default settings, therefore everyone should change the default settings… to the wrong option?
edit: Why is it that homo sapiens is always willing to go an extra mile just to hurt itself?


Why are they always coming up with some kind of bullshit excuse? :D


A bit of unrequested advice… Help expand, or start a mesh network in your area. The SX1260 lora chips are a modern miracle. Plus, It’s basically hiking and socializing activity masked as a tech hobby. There’s also a chance of learning a little bit of physics, or community organizing as a bonus.
With the new people you meet, there’s also a chance of finding a new hobby. I’ve met an unexpected number of paraglidists through my various tech interests. People from all kinds of backgrounds are really into flying. Who knew?
Is this related to Glance in any way?


It’s hard to hear what they are trying to say over all the gun fire noise.
So it’s not just me. The peering between europe and asia IS crap!
I’ve been to thailand in november and the connections to europe were hit or miss the whole time. The latency was poor and the reliability varied day by day.
The only thing that made any difference was switching providers on the EU side. It seems that some ISPs have better peering than others.
Also lowering the MTU for the vpn tunnel seemd to help a lot, but that might’ve been a placebo.


speed will increase as development continues
LoRa is already surfing on the bleeding edge of physics. There is no way to get anything more out of it, other than allocating wider EM spectrum for this usecase.
There are some radio amateurs in my area trying Meshcore on 169Mhz for example. There are also some new boards available that can do LoRa on 2.4Ghz, but both approaches have some downsides as well.
For a more stable and reliable network, we would also need radios capable of communicating on multiple channels simultaneously (remember, the whole thing started off as a reaction to really cheap, almost disposable dev boards), but now we’re approaching the complexity and requirements of the traditional mobile networks.


People who studied the code speak really fondly about reticulum, however, it’s not as popular for building the lora based mesh networks, because the full stack does not run on the simple microcontroller. You need what is basically a standard PC connected to it. Given that mesh repeaters are usually designed to run off-grid on solar and battery, wasting additional power for a raspberry pi or similar computer would make the project unfeasible.
All while Meshtastic or Meshcore are perfectly happy with the esp32 or nrf microcontrollers. And the nrf ones can run without a direct sunshine for days with the reasonably large battery.


Isn’t this whole project just a showcase for their unique backend? They must be really insecure about it to ban any competition in the license.


So… is it an obsession to want to be at least <100? Asking for myself. Send help :D
I get consistently better results on steamdeck vs PC due to lower controller latency.


Before you start establishing a working group to assess the impact of creating a commitee to judge the effect of switching to replacable cells, what if…
What if the companies just packed a few universal rechargable cells with their product? I meam the charging circuit is already a part of the design.


I’ve patiently waited until the flashing guide for the roborock s8 was out, went to buy the s8 pro ultra, just to discover valetudo has dropped the support, because appearently a different version of the same robot was silently released, that would’ve been turned into a brick if I tried the installation procedure.
Now I have a dumb robot. It does like 95% of what I expect it to do, but I might at least solder an ep32 to the top buttons so that scheduling through the home assistant would be possible
people have stories how the dev is an ass
If an opensource project has an author who’s not a jerk, that’s when you get suspicious!


I once put my homelab rack outside of my apartment, in the hall. Then used it to catch a bastard who kept stealing my bike light, and later tried to snatch the whole bike.


The more shocking is that one guy who KNOWS it’s sqlite, but ain’t afraid to admit it!
Piping scripts directly to bash is a security risk
Nobody has ever explained why. What is the difference between executing a script directly from curl, and adding a repository which downloads a package which contains a script.


Proxmox is based on Debian, but its installer does not offer you as many options as the base Debian installer. People figured out you can just install debian with your prefered settings and then just slap the proxmox packages on top.


From the promotional materials I’ve seen so far, the game seems to be a showcase for the SpacetimeDB backend so this move does actually make sense.
Question for the general public. Why not use the DNS server provided by your ISP?
They already know what websites you visit, because TLS1.2 still leaks the hostname. They might as well provide some useful service in return.
I know nothing about the game, but came here to see who’s offended by it, and by how much. Was not disapointed.