If they add on a service charge at a bar. I always ask them to remove it. A service charge for me walking to the counter and ordering a drink.... Really!
If they add on a service charge at a bar. I always ask them to remove it. A service charge for me walking to the counter and ordering a drink.... Really!
This is so annoying. Also if a seller is selling the same fake product, it will get binned with the official retailers :) so it's just pot luck.
Its their profile photo.
This is not the way to do it. The correct way would be multiple SSID's with each tagged to their own VLAN.
Each VLAN has its own subnet. You can then use a zone based firewall, to allow the zones(subnets) to access each other.
You can also then apply QOS, to limit guest network speeds, prioritize LAN traffic etc.
And zone based firewalls are stateful, you can do rules such as LAN can reach IOT, but not the other way. Or IOT can only reach the IOT server, on specific ports.
We have wedges and curly fries here in the UK too :). We have Chips, Fries, Curly Fries, Potato Wedges, Salt and Pepper chips, Ziggy Fries and many more I assume
Or hear me out... Just don't give it an internet connection.
SFP+ is 10Gb/s not SFP. The ASIC needs to be capable of the speeds for the transceiver to work. SFP+ is the name given for 10Gb/s module and transceivers.
So if a device supports SFP+ it supports 10Gb/s. It doesn't automatically mean it will work with 5 or 2.5Gb/s transceivers.
Well it's usually In the firmware. As this is a laptop, the display is usually a dumb display. It depends if the manufacturer wrote the firmware into a controller or used windows drivers.
They're not actually lower powered, they just have a TDP limit set.
E.g. A 8500 and 8500T will idle at the same power consumption, but the 8500T has a TDP limit set.
Having an AS does not make you an ISP. It just means you have a public AS, which you can use to peer with providers on the Internet, if you have an agreement to peer.
It's almost perfect. I all miss, is the ability to stack the icons on a folder, and set the folder background transparency when expanded.
No it doesn't. Sadly, maybe some vendors include it. But android doesn't have this. Source Pixel 8 Pro.
I would love an option to only send me a notification from said app, if I haven't received on in the last x amount of time. But its not in Android by default.
Its the Go lang gopher https://go.dev/blog/gopher
My solution is the correct way and easier way. You don't need MAC address white-list. You just have a guest SSID with DHCP on, they get the IP from the subnet in that zone. No crazy subnet hacks etc.
Can I join your guest network, sure. Let me just grab your mac address, login to the DHCP server, create a reservation with a limited subnet mask that can still see the default gateway.
Or can I connect to you guest network, sure here is the code or scan that QR code. That's it, they're in the guest VLAN and subnet, zoned off on the firewall and have QOS applied to not saturate the network.
Love my XPS 13, runs fedora with no issues. Such a solid laptop. Also love my 4K screen
I know what this is, but he didn't say that. But they said pay 75% on all assets worth 10M. So if you own a house or a yacht, car, etc worth 10M. They suggest you pay 7.5M in tax on that every year.
I understand you. Very annoying these days.
Because they're fries not chips ;)
The UK has two modes of "fibre" FTTC fibre to cabinet. Then copper to your property. Or FTTP, fibre to premise, which is as you describe fibre right to your property.
So buy one that's a little more expensive and will. It's still going to be tons cheaper that a commercial display and offer better performance
For dynamics you have to ask MS for access to the sql back end. Then its granted for several hours as read only. That's why you have to use synapse link to a data lake etc.
You do understand, when you have VM's set to auto scale, they shutdown when not in use, if you're using horizontal scaling.
Maybe the old Dysons. The new ones are rubbish. Shark all the way.
Finally someone who gets it.
But it is. They're stopped and deallocated. They start up when demanded. And shutdown when below a threshold or a certain schedule.
In pretty much any enterprise using the public cloud. Everything is auto scaling, so shutdowns when not needed. Dev environments shutdown over night... If you're not shutting down and scaling in the public cloud, you're doing it wrong.
No we shut them down. They get deallocated the same way as shutting down a virtual server does. They're not containers, the scaling part just turns them on and off based on workload or schedule
We power off servers in the enterprise all the time and on schedules 😂. Its called saving money.
Is it shutting down servers... Yes. it just does it based on parameters and thresholds.
Then you get things like VDI servers and jump boxes that only need to be on between certain hours, so get shutdown outside them hours.
75% on 10M is 7.5M. This is how you get people to end up paying $0, because that rate is far to high. Its like saying for every $1 you earn, you will get $0.25C. Yeah you wouldn't be happy with that.
30% of 10M is better than 0% of 10M. If I had that money and they wanted to charge me 75% tax, I would rather pay a smart accountant 1M and get to keep 9M.
I am just waiting for your switch shelf to collapse. That's some serious flex. :)