

Metal Mario?
Metal Mario?
Dude, seriously. I’m on an extended family trip right now and we bought one right before we came. I wish we had bought two or three. I am so stoked for the future of Linux gaming.
Also I bought the switch 2 before my steam deck. Had I gone the other way, I probably would’ve just skipped the switch 2. We didn’t even bring it on our trip.
Dang! I should’ve taken my kids out of school and driven them 100 miles to see the totality! I may never get another chance like that.
I think being in 100% totality would make all the difference. I was in like 60 or 70 percent totality and while it was neat, and I’m happy I got to experience it, it wasn’t insanely awesome.
Yosemite. People told me about it for years, along with how it was full of tourists, so I avoided it. Eventually I did go and wow, it’s incredible. Seriously one of the most amazing places I’ve ever seen.
Interesting answer. It was the opposite for me. No worries though, you do you.
Ok, that looks awesome. I may be using that for my next NAS build, which may come soon because my N54L is like 10 years old now.
The node case would be so much better if they made the hard drive slots externally accessible. I see they’ve updated it so all the drives are not attached in a huge stack anymore, which seems nice. I personally found it to be a huge pain to work on, and after using it I switched to hp microservers with hot swap slots for HDDs.
But for what OP asked for, it might be the best option.
I quit cold turkey by dns blocking Reddit everywhere and deleting narwhal. I don’t know how people can quit in any other way. Apps like Reddit are designed to be addictive, so it’s no surprise that people have a hard time giving them up.
Definitely clickbait. The phrase “send texts” as it’s been used for the past quarter century means “sms texts” or maybe “text messages to other people on mobile phone networks”, which is not at all what this is.
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It’s even mentioned at the top of the linked article.
Tea, which topped the Apple App Store charts this week — shortly before the app was hacked.
My setup is different from yours, but maybe it’ll be a reference for something you could do.
I use WireGuard. I forward my dns over the tunnel. The dns servers are my home dns servers (pihole). Those servers resolve my service hostnames to their LAN addresses. Those LAN addresses are resolvable when I’m connected with WireGuard. This means I use the same IP addresses and same host names over vpn or locally on the LAN.
I don’t think iOS allows multiple VPNs to be enabled simultaneously. There appears to be only one VPN on/off toggle switch. From what I’ve seen you can have different vpn profiles but only enable one at a time. I could be wrong though.
Desktop operating systems like macOS, Linux (did I mention yet that I use arch Linux?), BSD, and um… that other one… oh yeah, Windows do allow this. I’m sure there are a variety of compatibility problems, but in general, multiple VPNs with the same or even different technologies can work together.
WireGuard routes certain traffic from the client (your iPhone) through the server (the computer at your house). If you route all traffic, then when your iPhone accesses the internet, it’s as if you were at home. Since that WireGuard server is sitting on your home LAN, it is able to route your phones traffic to anything else on that LAN, or out to the internet.
Wireguard clients have a setting called AllowedIPs that tells the client what IP subnets to route through the server. By default this is 0.0.0.0/0, ::/0
, which means “all ipv4 and all ipv6 traffic”. But If all you want to access are services on your home LAN, then you change that to 192.168.0.0/24
or whatever your home subnet is, and only traffic heading to that network will be routed through the WireGuard server at your house, but all other traffic goes out of your phone’s normal network paths to the internet.
Some routers even run WireGuard natively :) like for instance Ubiquiti. Personally I’d rather run it on my own server though because ubiquiti doesn’t have easy IAC features.
WireGuard is free. Obviously my instructions didn’t go into detail about specifically how to set everything up. Port forwarding is required. Knowing your servers external IP address is required. You also need electricity, an ISP subscription, a home server (preferably running Linux), so on and so forth. This is /c/selfhosted after all.
I can’t wait for one of these to have an interpretation that limits use of ICE vehicles.