Openwrt can run Adguard, and as long as your gateway can run docker, you can probably get pihole working.
Openwrt can run Adguard, and as long as your gateway can run docker, you can probably get pihole working.
For openwrt+wireguard, see: https://cameroncros.github.io/wifi-condom.html
Looks like tailscale should work in openwrt: https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/services/vpn/tailscale/start
For the wireguard server, I am using firezone, but they have pivoted to being a tailscale clone, so I am on the legacy version, which is unsupported: https://www.firezone.dev/docs/deploy/docker
Edit: fixed link
You think the shovelware will properly self-declare? If only :)
They are gonna have to really specifically define what AI is.
Is it a LLM? manually coded agent? Some other machine learning?
That is likely a speed test server within the same data center as your vps, or they have special traffic shaping rules for it.
Try using iperf from your local box to the VPS and see what speeds you get
Never heard that term, but its a very obscure concept, so wouldn’t surprise me if it had multiple names. Probably vender specific names?
Seems quite a few people havent heard of it, hence a lot of the split DNS answers :/
I can’t remember exactly what its called, but something like router NAT loopback is what you want. I’ll have a look around. But if you set it right, things should work properly. It might be a router setting.
Found it: https://community.tp-link.com/en/home/stories/detail/1726
Yeah, I looked into that, but I seem to be in the google play beta for bitwarden and nothing is broken? Looks like this is a different beta? Bizarre.
Is this a new breakage? I’ve been using vaultwarden + android for years now?
4 cores is a bit limiting, but definitely depends on the usage. I only have 1 VM on my NUC, everything else is docker.
I thought all the core processors had VT* extensions, I was using virtualization on my first gen i7. They are very old an inefficient now though.
I5 3470 is old, but its not that bad. Lots of people are homelabing on NUCs which are only very slightly faster. Performance per Watt will be terrible though. (I am on an i7-10710u, and I’ve yet to run out of steam so far - https://cpu.userbenchmark.com/Compare/Intel-Core-i7-10710U-vs-Intel-Core-i5-3470/m900004vs2771 )
It has VTx/VTd, so should be okay for proxmox, what makes you think it won’t work well?
You have a typo: platform: esphome
.
Thanks for posting, good catch!
I cant test this, but should it be something like:
# Example button configuration
button:
- platform: template
name: Livingroom Lazy Mood 1
id: my_button
# Optional variables:
icon: "mdi:emoticon-outline"
on_press:
- logger.log: "Button 1 pressed"
- platform: template
name: Livingroom Lazy Mood 2
id: my_button2
# Optional variables:
icon: "mdi:emoticon-outline"
on_press:
- logger.log: "Button 2 pressed"
As for the other thing, that might be something you need to write your own driver for? if you need some inspiration, this repo has a driver for mitsubishi heatpumps, which does something similar (read/write to a uart): https://github.com/echavet/MitsubishiCN105ESPHome
Homeassistant is another option. Host the server and run the app on your phone. Its not very granular though, and the user interface is not great
Here in Aus, this is how the NBN is provided in some areas, there is a NBN coax-to-ethernet box, and then you can plug in your own router.
There is always a chance that your ISP is doing something weird that prevents that working, but I think it should be fine.
I enjoyed Luigis Mansion 3. Never tried the previous games, but this one was fun. Has coop as well which you and your son may enjoy.
This is bad journalism. Crypto is full to the brim with rug pulls, reporting on this before a real physical device has been made is just advertising the rug.
Its not, but if the value of the data is low, its good enough. There is no point backing up linux isos, but family photos definitely should be properly backed up according to 3-2-1.
It depends on the value of the data. Can you afford to replace them? Is there anything priceless on there (family photos etc)? Will the time to replace them be worth it?
If its not super critical, raid might be good enough, as long as you have some redundancy. Otherwise, categorizing your data into critical/non-critical and back it up the critical stuff first?
I think its better to keep your gateway basic, and run extra services on a separate raspi or similar. Let your router/gateway focus on routing packets.