Eh, there’s conduit, so they can always upgrade to fiber down the road.
Eh, there’s conduit, so they can always upgrade to fiber down the road.
what’s a tery?
Your replacement, Dick.
I hate to be that guy, but they’re actually called vent glass/windows, even in modern vehicles where they don’t open to ventilate. The quarter glass is in the rear of the vehicle on the quarter panel.
Obligatory: not mine just pulled from Google images. Looks like morning brew logo in the corner
I’ve also heard 127.0.0.1 referred to as Home, so maybe he kicked another kid out of his house?
If I understand correctly, it’s nat on the local home router AND nat on the ISP’s router as well. It’s a double nat.
They’re fairly common in the US with smaller or local fiber networks, but most ISPs offer a static IP for an additional $10/month to bypass the CGNAT
Queso caseoso I think
Lol by the time I actually needed to upgrade from that mini, all the fruit stand stuff wasn’t really upgradable anymore. It was really frustrating, so I jumped ship to Windows.
Those iMac screens seemed so fiddley to remove just to get access to the drives. Why won’t they just bolt them in instead of using glue! (I know why, but I still don’t like it)
Lol, I used to have an 08 Mac mini and that required a razor blade and putty knives to open. I got pretty good at it after separately upgrading the RAM adding an SSD and swapping out the cpu for the most powerful option that Apple didn’t even offer
If they were made in China and imported via Canada you would still have to pay tariffs on them, but just guessing there
I’ve said it before, but I don’t think they’ll do a 2nd cache this generation. If they do it’s gotta be named 9999x3d
“Remember, if you need to trickle down, please do so over the side of the escalator”
Buddy, if you can’t follow a thread, there’s probably no one here who can help you.
His point is that you have it backwards:
“Metre” is the preferred spelling in British English, while “meter” is preferred in American English and other forms of English outside the UK.
When it comes to accessibility, yes
Yes, it’s the OS for their custom KVM board. Released open source so it can be inspected or altered by the users of their board
It’s a touchscreen for a smart watch that they reused to save money. Would have been more expensive to design a custom screen when something like this already exists
I’m getting 10gbps over my 100ft 5e run. But iirc 33m/100ft is the max for that