

The prick writing it seems quite pro-slop so I guess in his eyes, it does.
[He/Him]
Software developer by day, insomniac by night. Send me pictures of baby bats to make my day.


The prick writing it seems quite pro-slop so I guess in his eyes, it does.
Aye, same. I’m Swedish. Not thrilled about the U.S. threatening to invade Greenland, or kidnapping heads of state. Denmark has been sucking up to the U.S. a lot through the years which goes to show that you can’t trust the U.S., ever.
Never used Pangolin, so I’ve no idea. Sorry.
A lot of people are boycotting as many things from the U.S. as they can because of the warmongering paedophile, and his cadre of paedo crooks.
It’s not exactly exciting to buy into products when you have that stinky orange mess breathing down your neck about how he’s going to invade your continent and annex countries.
Netbird is a European company headquartered in Berlin. It’s fully FOSS and you can self-host the entire stack, unlike Tailscale which relies on a third party implementation.
There’s a script on their github that makes setup super easy.
That said, I’ve no idea where their servers are, if you opt to use their servers instead of hosting your own.
Edit: oh yeah, they also have a YouTube channel with updates and guides.


Ah. I interpreted it as then believing I’m an LLM.


It was hyperbole.


Ugh. This left me with a heavy feeling in the pit of my stomach. Wikipedia is such an important resource and to see it vandalised with LLMs like this is vile.


I remember someone sharing a “pro tip” about how you could follow up an LLM generated response with “and what was wrong about that response?”
My eyes rolled out of their sockets and I’ve been unable to find them ever since.


I’ve got two laptops, a personal one, and one from work. They’re both Lenovo laptops.
My personal laptop can be repaired, you can slip out the battery and replace it without even using a screw. There’s actually two batteries, one is internal and does require some screws to be removed but it’s not very difficult. Anyone who wants to can easily do that. The same goes for the fan and cooler, RAM, and SSD, network card, keyboard, screen, and trackpad. There’s probably a bunch of other things that can be easily replaced that I just haven’t looked into.
My work laptop is from 2022, so it’s about 4 years old now. It doesn’t have a second external battery. Opening it up is a bit tougher, and you can’t replace things as readily.
They have roughly the same dimensions, and weigh about as much. I don’t really see the added value to me as a consumer with this newer laptop.


My first laptop was a briefcase. There is such a thing as a happy medium. You could design light laptops that have replaceable parts, but they don’t do that because that would give choice back to the consumer and most manufacturers whole business model is to have you discard your computer and buy a brand new one every few years.

This is ridiculous.
If you disabled the GPU in the UEFI you’ll have to re-enable it in the UEFI.


It uses Traefik by default, actually. I’m struggling to get the reverse proxy function to cooperate with me still hosting other things on the VPS. I use it not just as my Netbird coordinator, but also to host my Forge and site.


It’s nice, the quickstart script is super easy to use and gets you started… well quickly. I’m still figuring the reverse proxy bit out, but it fully replaced tailscale for me in about ~10 minutes?


Nope.
NetBird is European. The stack itself is FOSS and self-hostable instead of relying on third party projects, like Headscale. It has a reverse-proxy feature in beta that was also appealing.
NetBird also utilises Coturn for STUN and TURN, and I’ve other software that depends on Coturn, so that kind of went hand-in-hand.


I recently switched from tailscale to NetBird. Similar solution but FOSS and self-hostable.
Have you exposed the subnet the services are on, onto the Tailscale network?


Almost like they’re run by the same fucks. Huh.
Since piracy is argued to be fair-use, we should all have sizable media libraries.