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Nobody is going to touch that. Make builds available from a gitrepo maybe
just_another_person@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What's the "proper" way to share a single Wireguard connection for all devices on the local network?
2·1 day agoPretty much got it. Any other static routes you setup will be static to the new router only, but otherwise that’s pretty much it. Devices with static IPs don’t participate in DHCP, so it won’t cause a conflict. Just make sure DHCP is disabled on the new device.
just_another_person@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What's the "proper" way to share a single Wireguard connection for all devices on the local network?
2·2 days agoThe default gateway for the new device needs to be your existing router in order to get to the internet. Then when you create a new WG connection, you ensure all traffic that gets passed to this new device forwards through the Wire guard tunnel.
PC > WG-router > existing-router > internet
just_another_person@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•What's the "proper" way to share a single Wireguard connection for all devices on the local network?
2·2 days agoYou need a router or a proxy. A proxy would be annoying, so a router is preferred.
If you don’t have control of your edge router, just get a cheap Pi-type device, install OpenWRT, setup your VPN connections, then create a route on your network to point at this new device for whatever you need it for.
If you simply want to use it at-will for certain things, you can put a proxy on it.
As to your other issues, it sounds like your WG connection is just dropping, in which case it won’t automatically reconnect by default. OpenWRT has plugins that can monitor that and reconnect when it drops, or you can script it pretty quickly as well.
just_another_person@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•No AI* Here - A Response to Mozilla's Next Chapter - Waterfox BlogEnglish
871·2 days agoAm engineer. Know zero professional people in the engineering community who use AI browsers, and very few who even touch AI for anything aside from docs or stats.
In my personal life I know zero people who use these browsers. I think this is just panic from the higher ups at Mozilla who have no idea what in the fuck the company should be doing or is about, even.
Start making tools to give to people to combat this bullshit from the EU. Build a USABLE and decentralized chat app that people can actually use FFS. Build something like Proton and ACTUALLY BECOME SELF-SUFFICIENT.
Others have eaten your lunch because of this exact thing. Do better.
just_another_person@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•How do I keep PulseAudio from randomly changing the volume?
4·5 days agoI’ve never seen this “just” happen, but have seen it during events like switching from headphones to speakers and such.
You may also have your app volumes linked to your master channels, meaning when you lower the sound on your master with something like a key combo, then it lowers the individual app volumes as well, which is generally not something you’d want enabled.
Apps at full, and using PCM/Master channel for general volume is pretty much the “default”.
Probably going to be Frigate. It’s meant for NVR, and has easy time management tools for review, plus you can setup an easy monitor stream with RTSP or ON IF to watch live from elsewhere.
You could also engage it’s inference for doing simple identification or animals and objects to tag clips where something happens in a Region of Interest.
Nah. Specific field registers for specific things, and something like Bitlocker doesn’t watch ALL of them.
From the few docs I can find, it looks like 0,2,4, and 11. Pretty common.
PCR is the name of a registered value in your TPM module.
Did you disable or otherwise changed your Secure Settings in your BIOS? That would do it.
Good point!
Why wouldn’t you just change the settings on your monitor? Seems much easier.
Hit ESC during boot and watch the boot logs to see what’s hanging. Some systemd service is taking awhile and doesn’t have a sensible timeout. Probably network.
just_another_person@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•I Went All-In on AI. The MIT Study Is Right.English
10·12 days agoNo shit
just_another_person@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•[Solved] How to set up Linux for gaming on GIGABYTE G5 MF?
2·12 days agoVery first thing: see if the Nvidia driver is actually loading properly by running
nvidia-smiand see what it says.You may have the Nouveau driver loaded instead, which you can check with:
lsmod | grep nouv
just_another_person@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.world•need help creating a package manager in c#English
3·14 days agoIt might be better to first learn about existing package managers: build some packages for rpm, apt, pac…etc.
The fundamentals would be easier to understand from there to figure out what you actually want to write and why.
At their core, packages are simply just bundles of flat files, and stages of scripts that get executed. That’s it. Like a zip file with scripts.
Package Managers on the other hand are just clients that deal with the metadata and contents of packages and decide what to do with them. They go way deeper.
just_another_person@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Weird issues after swapping GPU from nVidia to AMD: audio crackling and mouse cursor "lagging" and going crazy
3·14 days agoTry disabling the power saving settings for the machine, and make sure your power profile is set to ‘performance’. See if that changes anything.
I am certain this is a power issue, but where it’s stemming from us difficult to tell without actually seeing the machine.
Would also be useful if you check your BIOS for voltage settings for your CPU/MEM, and your PCIE lanes.





















If you’ve not been paying attention to their other random products, it would seem this is unlikely.
They just jump from random thing to random thing and collect money along the way, draining the coffers with their C-level titles. Absolutely bullshit.