I’ve never done it so I can’t say for certain.
I typically buy purpose built routers which advertise routing speed benchmarks
I’ve never done it so I can’t say for certain.
I typically buy purpose built routers which advertise routing speed benchmarks
It’ll be hard to find one at that price. You may find something with a 2.5G NIC but whether or not it will actually route at line speed is highly unlikely.
Your best bet to keep prices low is to add a 2.5G NIC to an old PC. Even that may not work
Markor on Android and Obsidian on Desktop.
All synced with syncthing
Look at Mikrotik. Very affordable and extremely powerful. Only do this though if you know what you are doing with networking
All my devices use Syncthing via Tailscale to get my data to my server.
From there, my server backs up nightly to rsync.net via BorgBackup.
I then have Zabbix monitoring my backups to make sure a daily is always uploaded.
I’m surprised at how against the idea a lot of people seem to be
For sure. Just omitting the name of the winner will work
I 100% agree. The times where I need to watch a race late I need to avoid all social media.
At the very least, don’t post the names of the winners in the post title
Brother works incredibly well. Plug and play
The Race
I don’t know of any cheap options that include 2x SFP Ports.
Mikrotik has the RB5009 if you can live with only one.
It’s using the Duckduckgo app
Open source isn’t just about auditing the source. Sometimes a bug might be found that the developer might not have the time to fix so someone else with the know-how can contribute the changes to fix the bug. Some goes for any features/enhancements that would be nice to be added
Liftoff is another open-source option that is getting a lot of updates and is very stable
I love my CCR2004-16G-2S+
@rist097@lemmy.world Liftoff is now on the playstore: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.liftoffapp.liftoff&pli=1
I’ve very curious if Lemmy could scale to sizes similar to Reddit. Would that require creating multiple instances? Is there a max active users that an instance could handle? Is there a way to load balance between servers?
I suspect this hasn’t been done since Lemmy just recently exploded in popularity.
Debian