Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | more venusenvy47's commentslogin

I have a VPS and have thought about using Wireguard on it for accessing my home network, but I worry that I don't understand the security well enough to use it. Wouldn't less experienced people like myself be safer with Tailscale or Netbird or something that doesn't require extensive knowledge of a publicly-hosted server?


I've been using Netbird on my home network and on my daughter's laptop to provide remote support while she has been at college. This year she moved into an apartment, which has its own cable modem and router/network that I set up. I haven't figured out how I will configure a "zero-trust" architecture that will allow me to act as remote support for her remote network. I'm not the best at networking and I'm afraid of connecting the networks in a manner that I don't expect. I'd be interested to hear if anyone can suggest how to configure this arrangement. I've always had her leave the Netbird client on her laptop turned off unless she is specifically asking for help. I plan to do something similar, where I would have her remote network normally disconnected from whatever VPN bridge network I set up.


I'd like to watch this documentary. Do you know the year and/or channel where you saw it? The antenna is focused with a tremendous amount of gain towards a spot in the sky, and provides a very significant amount of rejection to signals in all other directions. I can't see how you would get a signal at 1.42 GHz from a watch or flashlight. Harmonics from something like a walkie talkie only occur when the radio is transmitting, and they would spread in bandwidth at each successive harmonic. It would have to be an extremely narrow fundamental frequency, with no audio signal on it, to get a signal with less than 10 kHz at 1.42 GHz.


https://m.imdb.com/title/tt7928816/

I don't remember where I watched it, but the 2nd and 3rd links from a kagi search were for Prime and Apple TV.


The big players use parallel processing of multiple users to keep the GPUs and memory filled as much as possible during the inference they are providing to users. They can make use of the fact that they have a fairly steady stream of requests coming into their data centers at all times. This article describes some of how this is accomplished.

https://www.infracloud.io/blogs/inference-parallelism/


God's Number has been proven to be 20. It can't be any lower.

https://www.cube20.org/


I've never added a custom filter. Do they sync to all my Firefox browsers that have uBO installed?



If only that worked on mobile Firefox, which doesn't support extension sync APIs. Other add-ons (eg tampermonkey) got use cloud storage accounts (Google Drive and/or Dropbox) for this, despite not being as useful on mobile devices (the UI for tampermonkey specifically is terrible on a phone)


Is there any way to disable the device prompt on my Android phone and Tablet? I'd prefer to go directly to the TOTP code entry as the first item.


Does this remove the full screen popup that occurs on both my phone and tablet when logging into my Google account? I'm not sure what type of 2FA this is called, but I would like to remove it and have it directly ask for the TOTP.


Hmm, that one is called "Google Prompt" but it looks like there's no option to disable it.


Can't these services be run from a country where The News/Media Alliance doesn't have jurisdiction?


But isn't the Oort Cloud is a sphere around the sun? I've always wondered why the planets and Kuiper belt have a preferred disc, but Oort doesn't.


One theory is that interactions and collisions (all scales: gas, dust, comet, planet) are what cause the participants to align in the direction of the original net angular momentum, and the Oort cloud is just too sparse to that have happened as much.

Oort dust clumped up to comet-size objects for sure, but that tended to happen for the particles that were already roughly in the same orbit. Looking at all orbits in the Oort cloud, they remained more random.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: