@8b688784 Maybe I should try configuring nftables so if it tries a bullshit <1024 port like say 123/tcp (NTP) they get blackholed like a sort of reverse port-knock.
@0c6299e4 Pretty sure I'd prefer eSATA if I had to deal with external hard drives on a regular basis. (I do tend to plug directly in the computer though, SATA being hotplug)
@05726da8
- 4 pins ought to be enough for random peripherals
- omg… how many different connectors do you need?
- USB-C managed to introduce cable compatibility issues and things like having to flip the connector to switch modes, prior versions at least were somewhat guessable.
@24d2ded2 Classic? Well the IBM kind, which is somewhat less retro to me as DB-style ports stayed current for ages, in fact DVI feels DB-derived.
Meanwhile Centronics… 20th century connector.
@a4360b15 > search for his name out of curiosity
> Product/Experience Designer and Entrepreneur living in the Barcelona, Spain.
> Habitat - Advancing the way we live
> 2017, founder. A tink-tank for advancing the urban architecture and challenge the way we look at housing.
> tink-tank
Yeah, if you knock it sounds hollow, no thoughts, head empty.
@Suika Eszterházy That's a lot of machines…
Pretty glad that here it's less than a dozen, after all single ~8 ports switch and few devices over wlan (mostly laptop, sometimes e-reader).
@2f77c6f8 By support for GNU Assembly, do you mean within GNU or from the rest of the floss community?
At least at best I had a "wait and see" approach to it and wouldn't be surprised that most outside also had a similar stance.
@2b562a3e I'd do this if the cheap adapters wouldn't sometimes make the card too loose in them :/
Instead I keep microsd cards into a small box, sadly none labelled except ones with a light background where I wrote a letter on them (which I then check against a text file).
Notes by Haelwenn /элвэн/ :triskell: | export