![](https://lemmy.ca/pictrs/image/33f22615-aa41-4fbd-9c09-d635020f2233.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/0943eca5-c4c2-4d65-acc2-7e220598f99e.png)
The number of users connecting their PC forfeit directly to the modem or purposefully disabling all protections because they’re too lazy is higher than you think.
The number of users connecting their PC forfeit directly to the modem or purposefully disabling all protections because they’re too lazy is higher than you think.
Icelandian.
I’m out of the loop. How does Carmen Sandiego fit into the whole init system debacle?
Men not being allowed to be emotionally expressive has led to so many mental health problems…
Think of that human torso being a very complicated neck rather than a half of a human grown onto a horse.
Now I can’t stop thinking of centaurs as giraffes with arms stuck to their neck.
“The Oregon/Idaho line was established 163 years ago and is now outdated,”
Either accept that earlier laws can be outdated and reinstate Roe v. Wade, or suck it up, ya hypocrites.
You can, but you’ll need to increase the microwave’s power accordingly.
Reddit has been astroturfed so much the recommendations there have to be taken with a lot of salt.
rapid mitosis
As in you are seeing multiple boot entries? It’s likely one entry per kernel version that you have installed. It doesn’t happen often these days any more, but in some situations it’s handy to be able to revert to a previous kernel if for example third party modules break.
Yep, if you request the desktop version you don’t get that redirect.
Or just request the desktop version.
It has implications on the effectiveness of VPNs on public networks.
There’s other reasons why universal addressing is not done - privacy, network segmentation, resiliency, security, etc. And while IPv6 proponents do like to claim that local networks wouldn’t be strictly necessary (which is technically true), local networks will still be wanted by many. Tying this back to phone numbers - phone numbers work because there’s an implicit trust in the telcos, and conversely there’s built in central control. It also helps that it’s only a very domain specific implementation - phone communication specifications don’t change very often. On computer networks, a lot of work has been done to reduce the reliance on a central trust authority. Nowadays, DNS and SSL registries are pretty much the last bastion of such an authority, with a lot of research and work having gone into being able to safely communicate through untrusted layers: GPG, TOR, IPFS, TLS, etc.
Whoa, that’s a sizeable edit to the post! Regardless the answer is pretty straightforward: your VOIP client (either the device if you have one or the software) is connected to a VOIP service which acts like a gateway for your client. Since the client initiated the connection to the gateway and is keeping it alive, you don’t need to make any network changes. Once the connection is established, standard SIP call flows (you can Google that for flow diagrams) are followed.
So no, you router is not part of the cell service. The VOIP provider is part of a phone service that receives calls and routes them for you, just like the cell towers are part of a telephony provider that routes calls through the appropriate tower.
Ah, I see we are resorting to ad hominem attacks now.
Laptops don’t get a new IP address every time they switch from one AP to another in the same network either. Your cell phone will get a new IP address if it switches to a different cell network.
A phone number does not uniquely identify a phone either.
When you do call routing with a PBX each phone has an unique extension, equivalent to the private IP of each host.
Oh, and there’s also anycast, which is literally multiple active devices sharing an IP.
Phone numbers can be spoofed, and SIM cards can be cloned. The analogy stands.
On the other hand it’s a perfect test bed, because there’s sufficient changes of direction and speed, and the fixed infrastructure lets you measure drift. Plus it being underground helps simulate GPS signal being weak or unavailable.