A lot of people just close the laptop lid or turn off the monitor thinking that's rebooting. Or they shutdown thinking it's better than restarting, but Windows' default shutdown is more of a close all programs and hibernate, so it often doesn't fix things.
The botnet's code probably doesn't support IPv6.
Is there something about it that makes it more resilient to DDOS?
While archlinux.org doesn't do this, you can have multiple A and AAAA records which can provide DNS based load balancing, and IPv6 is easier to do that with since you usually get allocated a whole prefix. Of course that only helps to distribute the load, if your internet connection is the bottleneck then it won't help.
But that means that someone else's server is used whenever you leave your home network.
I'm pretty sure syncthing does NAT hole punching, so someone else's server is only used for initial connection, after that, your data goes directly to your devices.
This isn't about Firefox, and there are zero mentions of Firefox in the article. This is about Mozilla screwing over their volunteers by replacing their human written translations, with inaccurate machine translations written by a closed source LLM.
Depending on your BIOS and with fast boot, you might need to just hold one of the keys while booting instead of spamming it on boot.
That's the OPs reply, not the AI.
Funny thing, time.is uses Cloudflare, and I only found out because of the outage.
Fun fact: there actually is an IP version 5, and the reason we went from v4 to v6.
You can also play the Android release fine with Waydroid.
Probably an unpopular opinion, but I don't actually mind it. There's now a bunch of layers that are selectable on the radar page itself, which were either nonexistent or hard to find on the old site. There's an easy to understand hourly forecast, instead of the text only one (which is still there), and I had no problem finding the 7 day forecast. Also there's finally HTTPS by default!
Of course if you don't like it, this still seems to work for the old website: https://reg.bom.gov.au/
To prove your point even more, WannaCrypt has a platinum rating on WineHQ.
SteveTech
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TBH, Australia is a bit of a mess, we used to use AS923, but we now use AU915, a lot of gateways are older (AS923), and some are newer (AU915), however AU915 is allowed to use more power, and AS923 is weaker.
As for my experience, I had to buy a gateway for my house, but a train station near my workplace already had a gateway professionally setup, and my university has a gateway too. So anywhere I'd usually take my backpack has coverage.
You can use a service called TTN Mapper to see the gateways near you with a heatmap to show their coverage.
I've also just left a comment on the Traccar forums with some useful info regarding the T1000.