I went with floorp, because it allowed native title bar disabling, with task bar editing so I could inject a grab handle; vertical tabs in sidebery, and a clean, nearly-ui-free vertical.
I went with floorp, because it allowed native title bar disabling, with task bar editing so I could inject a grab handle; vertical tabs in sidebery, and a clean, nearly-ui-free vertical.
It was a term coined to describe the step-by-step process modern tech platforms go through:
It’s specifically that, and there wasn’t a word that described that process previously, as it’s only something that’s possible in a modern, “web scale” worldwide platform.
ignored ;)
I’m afraid I don’t have time to look, or I’d try and diagnose the issue myself… It’s an awesome resource I’ll be making use of though!
C# 404’s - possibly some encoding issue?
And this is happening on the BETA channel. If you’re running beta, and you expect no issues, you’re an idiot. If you’re running beta, and you’re unable to investigate those issues and resolve them (Which, as you’ve such a clear, lucid understanding of what’s going on you clearly are able to), then you’re an idiot. If you’ve enabled developer options without understanding tech, and how to fix things yourself, you’re an idiot.
There’s no protecting against idiots, they’re on their own.
The vast majority of people will not see this issue because you have to go out of your way to see this bug.
Porkbun have a ddclient plugin on GitHub. Subdomains are supported. They’ve got a full API, so if something isn’t supported, someone can probably implement it relatively easily.
I’m going to briefly explain why I downvoted… this (I feel) is an unhelpful comment that doesn’t explain anything. You say, “[if] you’re comfortable support a broken-by-design network, do it.”, but you don’t explain why it’s a broken-by-design network.
I’ll say - I agree with you, but the comment doesn’t actually enhance the conversation and comes off as abrasive and unhelpful. If I’m looking for information, I’d rather be given education (Even if it’s just a, “Go here for why you don’t do that!”), not just a, “Don’t do it” with no assistance and help for how to do it right.
Some routers will call the 1:1 NAT feature, “DMZ” (Short for Demilitarised Zone). The idea is that you just act as a pass-through, in this case, “passing through” the external internal to the internal router.
That’s… Pretty nice, and once you’ve sourced everything, not that much more than a cm4 with good specifications…
Are they available in the UK easily? I realise that’s probably a Google-it answer, but I’ve not had chance to research yet
Those are fair pointers, but I suppose in the back of my mind I’m also thinking about power draw as well… Speed isn’t a massive retirement, it’s going to be hooked up to a poe network, if I wanted speed I’d first be putting in cat 6 or something…
Not heard of a beelink, time to research, thanks.
Sounds like Mornington Crescent with more steps…
PWM = Pulse Width Modulation, a way of changing the power of a signal to ‘emulate’ a different voltage or amperage by rapidly varying the ‘width’ of the signal, at a high enough frequency that you shouldn’t notice it.
Basically, it ‘stutters’ the signal. That’s all well and good until it starts to get into the frequency that users are sensitive to (Which is different for everyone). At that point it can cause headaches, nausea, eye strain, migraines and possibly even increasing any epileptic effects.
The other issue is normally it’s fine, but maybe when the brightness is down really low, you might get a 120Hz ‘flicker’ sort of like an old Flourescent light fixture, as it turns off and on the LED backlighting slow enough that you start to actually experience it. For me, I’ve not noticed it even at very low brightnesses and dark rooms, but I’m not sensitive to it at all.
You’re using teams. Modern teams is built on Skype, which is why it’s shit.