Hint: there are proper-sized people
F04118F
For restaurant finding/scanning, I use https://happycow.net/
2-in-1 deal: data no longer goes to Google, money no longer goes to Big Agro
It also has some sort of shovel in the front, so it can dig in behind a small ridge, showing only a thin slice of its extremely angled top armor. Wait for the enemy tank column to get in the narrow target window, shoot them, then immediately drive away backwards at 60 km/h.
You could buy them with /e/OS
pre-installed IIRC, at least some model at some point.
I bet that 1234 is used more often because of the 4-character minimum, like PIN codes on debit cards. It's 4 characters so it's safe. 123, on the other hand, is not safe, because it is 3 characters. /s
My solar inverter admin interface has a certain 4-digit password. So I wanted to change it to secure it, and found out that it only allows 4-digit passwords. Luckily the access point can be set up with a higher entropy password though (it is constantly advertised and had a very "secure" 8-digit password by default, I think you can guess which one)
That's crazy and genius!
"I don't do cloud computing, I do solar computing"
The way I understand it, there's 2 use cases for a VPN, with different concerns and providers:
- having access to your private home network from anywhere, through an encrypted tunnel (Tailscale, Wireguard on the router, etc)
- having your outgoing traffic to the internet go through an anonymized exit node so that your ISP can not watch or sell what you are doing (ProtonVPN, Mullvad VPN, etc)
Is Tailscale fit for the second? I thought not, as the exit node is not an anonymized VPN server but one of your own machines.
Except when it's a hyperfocus: then I go 20 steps deep thinking about it all day while leaving a trail of food, papers and other items I was supposed to put somewhere all over the house.