It’s a special event, so run a red carpet down the hall way and run a cable
under that? :) You’ll have power etc for streaming cameras and other gear so
one more cable shouldn’t be an issue and the cable can be gaffa taped down and
exit somewhere else.
Or skip the carpet and just run it along
They've pulled the installers from their website and refer people to the web
client...which is not much of a start...
On 2023-03-30 14:09 Greg Lipschitz wrote:
> Here is a list of commands (or make a shell script) to stop it phoning home
> and getting more payload.
>
> # Disable 3CX Unattended
mkdocs isn't bad, mdbook from the rust community is pretty great and has some
good plugins/options. Both of them can work with Github Actions to publish to a
variety of places like s3 buckets or github pages if you want things to be
accessible.
There's also hugo and zola for static site genera
"I spent a million bucks buying things to sign off on a list and still
allowed an uncontrolled device to send SMB via VPN to my network".
Doesn't matter how much shiny vendor-tin you buy, process failure's
going to get you every time.
James
On Sun, 25 Jun 2017, at 13:58, Jason Ross wrote:
> This
Hopefully this isn't too off topic - is there a Brisbane equivalent
these days?
James
On Wed, 9 Aug 2017, at 16:26, John Lowry wrote:
> Thanks, Much Appreciated.
>
>
> On 2017-08-09 16:12, David Dunn wrote:
>> Hi John,
>>
>> I'll put you in touch off-list with one of the committe
We have a tech on site tomorrow morning in Brisbane to do live works on
a major DC panel, they need a look out with a torch, insulating matting
and a few other things but it's legal.
James
On Thu, 10 Aug 2017, at 16:04, Sam Silvester wrote:
> I also am unaware of such a law. Simon, can you advise
Similar to this, we're seeing anyone that uses Outlook for iOS getting
blocked as spam when sent through o365 to @bigpond.com addresses -
anyone seen this before/recently?
James
On Wed, 8 Nov 2017, at 11:43, Brad King wrote:
> Hi Shane,
>
> Ill send you an email off-list.
>
> Rgs,
>
> Brad
>
If the customer got an email like that, I'd wager it's Telstra trying to "fire
the customer" ... sometimes it's worth losing a small profit to avoid large
support costs ;)
James
On Fri, 22 Dec 2017, at 09:47, paul+aus...@oxygennetworks.com.au wrote:
> Jeeze Mike, next thing you will want Toll r
Not to mention hardware fixes on-die :)
On Thu, 4 Jan 2018, at 15:03, Scott Howard wrote:
> The patches (which exist or will soon exist for all OSes) are only
> part of the solution.>
> You also need to be looking for BIOS updates from your server/PC
> vendors to get the full fixes. Some of the
Watch them pull out the “this warranty doesn’t actually cover anything,
and we don’t say it’ll work in all conditions” card. It’ll be nice to
get a free CPU if they do have to, however! :)
On Thu, 4 Jan 2018, at 18:32, Damien Gardner Jnr wrote:
> If the hardware is under warranty, I'd be expecting
, altered or obliterated. Intel assumes no
>> responsibility that the Product, including if used with altered clock
>> frequencies or voltages, will be fit for any particular purpose and
>> will not cause any damage or injury.>>
>> Option 1 and 4 seems to have them co
Tell the customer to call their supplier and tell them to make a complaint to
THEIR supplier? Sounds like someone's cut-rate piece of junk service is causing
troubles.
James
On Wed, 11 Apr 2018, at 17:29, Ross Wheeler wrote:
>
> Gentlemen (and ladies!) - I'm not often stuck with no idea which
What, like whatsapp/slack/irc/email/whatever? :)
On Thu, 24 May 2018, at 16:09, Nick Stallman wrote:
> If you had SMS via VoIP that would be *really* perfect.
>
> On 24/05/18 15:52, Karen Hargreave wrote:
>> Dual sim, VoIP app on the phone, then tell everyone to call the
>> number linked to th
I think we all need to step back a bit, let OP do what his auditor feels
is right, then thank him on behalf of EFF’s StartTLSEverywhere
project... [1]
;)
James
[1] https://starttls-everywhere.org
On Mon, 23 Jul 2018, at 18:21, Mark Foster wrote:
> Maybe i've missed something. Email is valid to
Everything I organise is encrypted end-to-end by default, and I'm
not even a criminal. It takes effort to *not* do it these days...
or SMS, ew.
James
On Wed, 15 Aug 2018, at 11:10, Bob Purdon wrote:
> On Wed, 15 Aug 2018 at 11:08, Paul Wilkins
> wrote:>> The covering blurb suggests all organised
Sometimes it helps to have something to point to when members forget that the
correct response to this is "take action" rather than "stop discussion".
James
On Mon, 1 Oct 2018, at 13:30, Matt Harlum wrote:
> Do people really need a Code of Conduct to tell them not to be sex offenders?
>
> > On
I'd argue the dynamic and ever-changing nature of peeringdb is what
makes it useful.
The static and physically vulnerable nature of the nation's networking
infrastructure is something best left privately, rather than publicly
documented in my opinion.
"security through obscurity" isn't something to
I can confirm a similar incident not in Sydney. It was later confirmed
that the noise was the contributing factor to the disk death.
James
On Fri, 14 Dec 2018, at 07:32, Robert Hudson wrote:
> Not sure. Some of the wordage indicates it may be a separate incident
> (albeit at a similar time)...>
They’ve been pretty public about their intent [0], not sure why you’d take “we
need to leave Australia” from their statement. I’d agree if they want to avoid
ever having to comply then sure, but that’s quite the extreme.
James
[0] https://fastmail.blog/2018/12/21/advocating-for-privacy-aabill-a
Please stop thinking out loud, this is the quiet carriage.
James
On Wed, 21 Aug 2019, at 17:17, Paul Wilkins wrote:
> Another thought, which is that horizontal mounting is optimal for polar
> regions, whereas you minimise precession at equitorial latitudes with
> vertical mounting (but only if
I know of at least two big banks of 56k modems being used as telemetry data
platforms for remote sites ... we had to get custom serial cables made for the
interfaces because the things they talk to are ~30 years old and still going
strong.
James
On Fri, 20 Sep 2019, at 09:28, Jamie Lovick wrot
It's probably related to the fact that people being in the one place all the
time is hilariously rare, and portable solutions that provide secure MFA don't
have all the interoperability and other downsides.
There's probably five "desk phones" in my entire organisation, and they're VOIP
teleconf
It's all well and good to hate on pfSense for VOIP issues, and there's
workarounds, but is there any equivalent alternative with an accessible user
interface for when you just want to make things work, without having to learn
yet ANOTHER domain specific language?
I can't see my users getting ov
It's part of Afilias taking over from AusRegistry... July last year.
https://www.domainregistration.com.au/news/2018/0604-au-registry-operator.php
On Fri, 11 Oct 2019, at 16:10, Rob Thomas wrote:
> You'd think they would have done something like 'Hey. This has
> changed. Use this server instead'
Are you really considering blocking customers' access to services, via the
connectivity/bandwidth they pay you for, because of the company that provides
that service?
After so much heated argument over net neutrality, I feel this shouldn't even
be a discussion.
I'd wager it wasn't even Telstra
I could see it as being a great option, but making it a default would be a
support nightmare.
"but grandma's printer works from anywhere, why doesn't mine?"
James
On Wed, 16 Oct 2019, at 12:06, Paul Brooks wrote:
> On 15/10/2019 2:33 pm, Mark Smith wrote:
> > I recently bought an IPv6 enabled W
My one piece of anecdata is that they seemingly cut the line and walked away
because it was raining, so we had to get a tech out (a week later) to get it
running.
James
On 2020-03-06 11:25 rich-li...@edit-co.com wrote:
> Experiences have varied – about 50% are a simple change-over of no more th
Not sure why you'd think NBN would make anything better, given all the
experience we've seen...
... not to mention you're collapsing the infrastructure so there's more cooks
in a smaller kitchen. :)
James
On 2020-04-13 15:44 Noel Butler wrote:
> https://forums.overclockers.com.au/threads/someo
Pretty sure the user stuff gets parsed, like google drive and photos - I'd be
very surprised if they messed with the object/disk storage...
James
On 2020-10-25 14:42 Matthew Scutter wrote:
> Going to call a [citation needed] on that, because it reeks of FUD to me.
>
> On Sun, Oct 25, 2020 at 1:
Maybe it's the fact that the NTDs are being powered by residential houses
instead of the provider's exchanges, and *very* few people in reality use
*good* surge protectors - let alone know they have to replace them after a hit,
or identify when they're no longer working?
The power's still comin
This matches with what I've seen/heard/read - the clicking is the NTD turning
off/on power to the DPU, while it tries to check if it's coming online.
We had a DOA DPU and have had one since after a storm, in ... under three
months.
James
On 2021-01-25 09:30 Matt Perkins wrote:
> There’s nothi
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