I think that means the access point can only run at up to 80Mhz bandwidth, so not full bandwidth.
I think that means the access point can only run at up to 80Mhz bandwidth, so not full bandwidth.
I am born too late to understand what Y2K problem was, this (the result) might be what people thought could happen.
I9 14900k…bad news for you, 13th and 14th gen I9 is unstable, crashes.
Suggestion: Wait for 15th gen or AMD 9000 series CPU to come out.
Downfall is the best.
Slay the Spire, with mods
If I can suddenly in coma for a year, wake up and pay my bills, it’s enough.
Humans are doomed, destroy themselves one way or another.
I remember trying Retroshare… no offline message is the biggest obstacle.
If the firewall just means no incoming connections, your computer can still reach out to the other side (if they open their port)
try ncdu?
sudo ncdu --one-file-system /
I would 100% exploit this (insurance for family).
HTML Form + any backend of your choice (that can handle HTML form)
Forgot to answer this question, yes I think it would work.
Yes, speed would be much slower.
Yes, you can host a normal website through tor.
AFAIK tor websites (onion service) doesn’t require exit node, and no one knows your IP unless you are unlucky enough all nodes you connected are controlled by same entity.
I am pretty sure you can set your own DNS server in Android.
I think most up-to-date OpenWrt routers can do later (with normal, unencrypted DNS requests), see https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/firewall/fw3_configurations/intercept_dns.
The model you mentioned (Flint 2) is supported by OpenWrt.
route ipv6 dns to a destination of my choice
Does this mean setting custom DNS server (so devices using DHCP picks up what DNS server you want them to use) or intercept DNS requests (MITM or use firewall rule to drop outbound 53 port requests)?
Pratically no universal way of making Linux boot with ARM processors.
Much more closed source drivers (than x86 ecosystem).