I clicked on the thread to mention this excellent Tim & Eric side project. Anyone who likes silliness and hasn’t seen it yet needs to crank up a torrent.
I clicked on the thread to mention this excellent Tim & Eric side project. Anyone who likes silliness and hasn’t seen it yet needs to crank up a torrent.
Demagogarule
Yeah. I’ve no need to change to anything else. pf/OPNsense 4life.
That’s how I’ve got mine set up, with OPNsense.
I’ve been using it a few years and I only know about half the stuff that pfSense/OPNsense can do. So I would advise newbies to just make small changes at a time because there’s a whole lot of stuff you can change. It’s worth learning, though. I wouldn’t use anything else for my main firewall/router nowadays.
PfSense and OPNsense are both killer router “out of the box” distros built on BSD. I say this as a Linux user, with little interest in running BSD for my applications, but… Respect to BSD. ✊
ZFS kicks arse. It’s worth learning enough to get a basic array going, with a couple of datasets and encryption. Once you get acquainted with that, you’ll be using it for years to come.
A centaur has four legs and a horse has four legs, so half a centaur and half a horse would have four legs.
Peter Cook did this joke with infinitely more panache about 30 years ago. Search YouTube for “Peter Cook Clive Anderson talks back”.
It happens in the UK too.
Use an old Pi 3B for running zigbee2mqtt on docker.
I used to run just the Linux version of it but decided to install docker on the Pi so it’s as easy as doing docker-compose pull
to update it.
This is so I can control my various lights and switches using Home Assistant.
It’s really bad that people end up living like this.
AntennaPod. The developers seem to have kept it to a very simple remit of just doing podcasts and doing it well.
The spherical cow and the ephemeral dog share the same father.
And the ASRock Deskmini range. I’m currently using one with an older Kaby Lake i7 as my Docker host.
You could (carefully) run a dd command to blast the partition data off the drive, in Linux or any Unix based system.
Let’s say your drive was recognised as /dev/sdc when you plugged it in.
First, make sure it’s unmounted:
Then blast a gigabyte of zeros over the partition information: 2. sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdc bs=1G count=1
The partition information is usually stored on the very first couple of megabytes on the drive, so blasting a gig’s worth of zeros linearly onto it should make it show up as an empty device next time you unplug and plug it in.
I heard about it when it was mentioned on the Trillbilly podcast, about two years ago. Which is quite an obscure way to hear about a project by Tim and Eric. So, yes, it’s not too well known.