This blog is specifically for websites that are public facing. Sure, you can wireguard into your local network, but you can also SSH into your local network. Either way you have to poke a hole.
This blog is specifically for websites that are public facing. Sure, you can wireguard into your local network, but you can also SSH into your local network. Either way you have to poke a hole.
Good read.
I would just like to add some additional information that favors changing your SSH port to something other than the default. When crawlers are going around the internet looking for vulnerable SSH servers, they’re more than likely going to have an IP range and specifically look for port 22.
Now can they go through and scan your IP and all of its ports to look for the SSH service? Yes. But you will statistically have less interactions with bad actors this way since they might specifically be looking for port 22.
While this is true, this feature is still a good one to have enabled.
Maaan, you turned off secureboot and tpm though. Does EndeavorOS not support that?
I cant seem to find the code for chrome that allows this. Can someone link it?
Are you constantly changing your post size settings?
Can also check out Phoenix connectors
Whats wrong with it?
I appreciate the enthusiasm for another arch fork. I hope it works out for them and its users.
All my homies use DisplayPort
Thanks
According to the example, a hit new AAA title on steam might need it.
The downside is having to do that manually. Kind of ruins the whole point of it. Flatpaks will remain out-dated until the maintainer has time to push it out. Forever behind.
Its up to your distros package maintainer to make the patched version available. You can find who maintains it and contact them so they are aware.
A lot of people engineer their computing environment to break with newer branches/versions of an OS, so they need to remain on the previous OS version for a bit until it’s safe for them to upgrade. It’s VERY important to have an upgrade path, and be able to test how apps will work in the new environment.
For example, compare which PHP packages are on Ubuntu 20.04 vs 22.04 vs 23.10. As a dev, you will have to be sure your PHP app can work with whichever PHP package is provided. Rebuilding your entire app from scratch every time an OS upgrade comes out is not sustainable, so devs will remain on an older version until they have enough time/resources to rewrite it for the newer OS. They might stay on 20.04 until the OS no longer receives updates and becomes End of Life. They might start looking at 24.04 and seeing which PHP version will be available on it, and rewrite accordingly.
This is just one example for one set of packages. Multiply this by tens of thousands of packages, and you can see how delicate and complex an OS upgrade can be. Not just for the maintainers, but complex for end users as well.
Wow this is kind of a cool project. This is the first im hearing about it.
Will definitely check it out. Thanks for making it 🙂
I have this issue occasionally when my laptop tries to use WPA3 to connect. Even with the correct password, it fails to set up.
Try verifying or manually setting it to use WPA2 Personal.
Do you have an example of an app that lets a device with no Miracast capabilities act as a receiver? Im curious if its possible.
Miracast typically takes priority. It will ask for permission to allow it to display. It will then return to your previous input once the wireless display is disconnected.
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