ot "tamper" with my
forwarded e-mail?
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Yuval Adam
https://yuv.al
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ou working with? Composite (i.e.
red/white/yellow "bananas")? HDMI?
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Definitely the TP-Link, they have great hardware and that device
works great as an xDSL modem.
Furthermore, D-Link devices tend to run on outdated kernels.
Put the TP-Link in bridge mode to minimize attack surface, use it
just as a dumb modem, and put
This might help:
http://linrunner.de/en/tlp/docs/tlp-configuration.html#usb
On 11/24/2017 05:51 PM, Michael Shiloh wrote:
> Very interesting. After removing TLP the problem seems to have gone
> away. I am now able to enjoy USB peripherals again. Thanks!
>
> I'd love to understand why, though.
>
While we're off-topic and discussing misinformation, it's important to
note that being anti Israeli policies (military occupation of Palestine
in this case) is not being anti-semitic.
Some Zionists seem to be confused about the fact that it's possible to
hold strong opinions against immoral and
On 06/13/2016 09:43 PM, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> No NAT in the context of your question. Whether the IP address will be
> routable is another issue altogether.
Not quite, Carrier-grade NAT (CGNAT) [1] is used by some ISPs in Israel
- CCC is one such example.
[1] -
On 06/10/2016 03:13 PM, vordoo wrote:
>
> Unlimited got to my neighborhood. Thinking of joining and will highly
> appreciate any delight and or horror stories.
Are they actually in your building at the moment? If not, expect months
of delays due to bureaucracy until you actually get a ping.
You can watch the streams directly if you point your media player (mpv
has best support in my experience) to the stream URLs.
Channel 1 Live (only on certain hours, I believe. Otherwise the URL has
become stale recently) -
On 05/04/2016 10:47 AM, geoffrey mendelson wrote:
> BTW, the R stands for Rafael, a division of IAI, which is owned by the
> Israeli government.
Are you sure this is the same rafael? http://www.rafaelmicro.com/
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On 05/04/2016 09:55 AM, Shlomo Solomon wrote:
> Is there any way to know if these cheap ones support Linux and/or
> Raspberry PI? As far as I could see none of them specifically mention
> Linux and many state which Windows versions are supported - but again
> with no mention of Linux.
>
All
On 05/04/2016 01:09 AM, Steve Litt wrote:
> All the boards on that list have frequency ranges that start at 24Mhz
> or higher. I'd like one that goes from 0.5-30Mhz.
>
You're asking for a lot from a $10 dongle. Even the upper tier SDR
boards (HackRF, BladeRF) don't go down to HF freqs, not
You can find very cheap ones on eBay for ~$8-10.
The most popular ones are based on the R820T(2) tuner, and perform very
well.
Also suitable for RTL-SDR [1] applications.
There are more expensive dongles in the $25 range but aren't neccesary
unless you care about performance charecteristics.
[1]
On 02/04/2016 02:14 PM, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> However, from what I know of Thunderbird, it is basically written on top
> of Gecko, and thus works with HTML, CSS and such. It should already
> provide good bidirectionality support (and if not: it's a bug that
> should be fixed).
>
That's true,
Is there any nice way to get Thunderbird to automatically process
e-mails in Hebrew via Fribidi? (When composing, but possibly when
viewing as well)
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On 01/29/2016 11:52 AM, Amos Shapira wrote:
>
> Does anyone here have experience with public IPv6 in the cloud
> (AWS/DigitalOcean/Google, in decreasing order of preference)?
>
Yes, I run my personal server on Digital Ocean + native IPv6 and it
works great.
Unfortunately, IPv6 support on AWS
018 Xphone
AFAIK they are the only ISP that supports native ipv6 on non-commercial
uplinks
On 01/12/2016 03:57 PM, Evgeniy Ginzburg wrote:
> Hi all.
> Do we have one or two??
> Want to get rid of NAT (partially).
>
> BR, Evgeniy.
>
> --
> So long, and thanks for all the fish.
>
>
>
>
> I would recommend against Arch Linux because, like I said, its
> installations can be left in an unusable state if one forgets to update
> it frequently enough. I'm not sure about Void Linux as I never used it.
>
That's factually incorrect. If you current state is stable, it will
remain
Arch Linux is highly recommended in this case. I've been using it for
the past several years and have never looked back at any other distro.
Arch should fit your requirement for bleeding-edge packages (kernel,
docker, etc.) yet it really is extremely stable (granted, I wouldn't use
it on a
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