Run an iperf test to see if the ethernet adapter is working correctly. The speed tests on my USB ethernet adapter are almost identical to an integrated one as long as it’s connected to a USB 3 port.
Run an iperf test to see if the ethernet adapter is working correctly. The speed tests on my USB ethernet adapter are almost identical to an integrated one as long as it’s connected to a USB 3 port.


Firefox has had one hidden away in about:config since they started adding AI. Are they going to put it in the settings page now?


So what happens when the certificate expires? Do you get locked out if you don’t have physical access?
I use inleed.xyz. It’s free, has IMAP/SMTP access and you can have as many accounts as you want. It’s limited to 1GB of storage shared between all accounts though.


If that’s the case, then you should return the TV if you can or replace the WiFi antenna with a 50 ohm resistor.


That’s only an issue if someone’s still running an open network near you.


You could use a very low power computer that’s always on like a Raspberry PI Zero W to send the WoL packet to the backup computer. It only uses about 1 watt. Some routers have the ability to send a WoL packet as well.


SFTP or WebDAV would work.


You can slow the RAM down too. You don’t need XMP enabled if you’re just using the PC as a NAS. It can be quite power hungry.


I’ve never seen any machine translation that I would consider anywhere near good.


Jellyfin is free open source software, they don’t have the money to provide free proxies to their users.


Yeah, no. If you really need to run Android apps on a PC, you can run them with Waydroid.


They are disabling it because the license cost went up 4 cents? Just pass that cost onto the customer. Even if they mark that up several times, I would rather pay that than have my battery drained because I have to software decode a video.
There is still a lot of H.265 content out there. I have many terabytes of it that I don’t want to transcode.
Inleed.xyz has free email hosting with IMAP and POP3 access. You can have as many accounts as you want, but there’s a limit of 1GB shared between all of them.
Yes, they do require you to use their nameservers unless you have a business account.


I used to use dynv6, but I started having issues about 2 years ago. DNS records would just stop resolving until I deleted and recreated them. Their forum has been broken for years, so there’s no way to get support.
If you only need 5 records or less, give FreeDNS a try.


Not when it comes with the huge downside of non upgradeable RAM. I will carry around a huge power bank before I buy a laptop with soldered RAM.


Keep the firewall on dedicated hardware. You don’t want your whole network going down because you have to do some work on the server.
Hydrogen would be fine as long as it’s not flying above an inhabited area. Helium supplies are limited.